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Portrait of Tommy Nylander. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Tommy Nylander

Professor

Portrait of Tommy Nylander. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Formation of a liquid crystalline phase from phosphatidylcholine at the oil-aqueous interface

Author

  • Jan-Willem Benjamins
  • Krister Thuresson
  • Tommy Nylander

Summary, in English

Adsorption of phospholipid (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine) and formation of a surface phase at the oil-water interface has been followed by using ellipsometry. The properties of the interfacial phase were found to depend strongly on whether phospholipid was added to the oil phase or to the aqueous phase as liposomal structures. In the latter case a monolayer formed, while if the phospholipid was supplied from the oil phase a lamellar phase appeared at the interface. The effect on the stabilizing surface phase of a surface-active protein (P-lactoglobulin) was also investigated. The observations are important for understanding stabilizing properties of surface-active compounds commonly used to stabilize emulsions. In addition it has been demonstrated that ellipsometry can be used to study the initial process when a two-phase system consisting of a water and an oil phase is transformed into a three phase system or eventually to a one-phase system.

Department/s

  • Physical Chemistry

Publishing year

2005

Language

English

Pages

2804-2810

Publication/Series

Langmuir

Volume

21

Issue

7

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

The American Chemical Society (ACS)

Topic

  • Physical Chemistry

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0743-7463