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Amphiphilic hydrophobically modified hydroxyethyl celluloses

The rheological properties of a fluid interface may be characterized by four parameters surface shear viscosity and elasticity, and surface dilational viscosity and elasticity. When polymer monolayers are present at such interfaces, viscoelastic behavior has been observed (1,2), but theoretical progress has been slow. The adsorption of amphiphilic polymers at the interface in liquid emulsions stabilizes the particles mainly through osmotic pressure developed upon close approach. This has become known as steric stabilization (3,4.5). In this paper, the dynamic behavior of amphiphilic, hydrophobically modified hydroxyethyl celluloses (HM-HEC), was studied. In previous studies HM-HEC s were found to greatly reduce liquid/liquid interfacial tensions even at very low polymer concentrations, and were extremely effective emulsifiers for organic liquids in water (6). [Pg.185]

A new class of amphiphilic, surface-active graft copolymers, hydrophobically modified hydroxyethyl celluloses (HM-HEC s), are comprised of a cellulose backbone with short polyethylene oxide (PEO) and grafted alkyl side chains. They are excellent steric stabilizers of 0/W emulsions. [Pg.185]

Amphiphilic polymers can have a strong impact on the phase behaviour of microemulsions already at very low concentrations. The most drastic consequence is that on the emulsification capacity of surfactants. A first work in this respect was carried out using hydrophobically modified ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose [ 1 ]. This is a comb-shaped polymer, having a water-soluble backbone functionalised with low molecular weight hydrophobic... [Pg.123]


See other pages where Amphiphilic hydrophobically modified hydroxyethyl celluloses is mentioned: [Pg.268]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.190 ]




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