Effective interaction potentials for model amphiphilic surfactants adsorbed at fluid-fluid interfaces

A Moghimikheirabadi and LM Sagis and P Ilg, PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 20, 16238-16246 (2018).

DOI: 10.1039/c8cp01632a

Computer simulations are a useful tool to explore the effects of interactions and structure of surfactants on interfacial microstructure and properties. Starting with "molecular-level", three-dimensional reference systems of short amphiphilic surfactants at fluid-fluid interfaces, we here derive effective interaction potentials for the corresponding two-dimensional systems of structureless particles confined to the interface plane. These reference systems are comprised of two immiscible mono atomic fluids (water- and oil-like particles) and nonionic linear amphiphilic surfactants. Our results show that coarse grained interaction potentials are only weakly dependent on surface concentration but their behavior is strongly dependent on surfactant interactions. The coarse grained system preserves the in-plane surfactant center-of-mass pair correlation function at the interface and the results of surface pressure-area isotherms are in a good agreement. This approach can be extended straightforwardly to other types of surfactants at both fluid-fluid and fluid-gas interfaces providing us with an effective pairwise interaction potential for the surfactant monolayer. These effective interactions can be used to explore large- scale self-assembly within the monolayer especially at low surface concentrations where reference simulations are extremely time-consuming.

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