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At the air-water interface

The external reflection of infrared radiation can be used to characterize the thickness and orientation of adsorbates on metal surfaces. Buontempo and Rice [153-155] have recently extended this technique to molecules at dielectric surfaces, including Langmuir monolayers at the air-water interface. Analysis of the dichroic ratio, the ratio of reflectivity parallel to the plane of incidence (p-polarization) to that perpendicular to it (.r-polarization) allows evaluation of the molecular orientation in terms of a tilt angle and rotation around the backbone [153]. An example of the p-polarized reflection spectrum for stearyl alcohol is shown in Fig. IV-13. Unfortunately, quantitative analysis of the experimental measurements of the antisymmetric CH2 stretch for heneicosanol [153,155] stearly alcohol [154] and tetracosanoic [156] monolayers is made difflcult by the scatter in the IR peak heights. [Pg.127]

Many complex systems have been spread on liquid interfaces for a variety of reasons. We begin this chapter with a discussion of the behavior of synthetic polymers at the liquid-air interface. Most of these systems are linear macromolecules however, rigid-rod polymers and more complex structures are of interest for potential optoelectronic applications. Biological macromolecules are spread at the liquid-vapor interface to fabricate sensors and other biomedical devices. In addition, the study of proteins at the air-water interface yields important information on enzymatic recognition, and membrane protein behavior. We touch on other biological systems, namely, phospholipids and cholesterol monolayers. These systems are so widely and routinely studied these days that they were also mentioned in some detail in Chapter IV. The closely related matter of bilayers and vesicles is also briefly addressed. [Pg.537]

Proteins, like other macromolecules, can be made into monolayers at the air-water interface either by spreading, adsorption, or specific binding. Proteins, while complex polymers, are interesting because of their inherent surface activity and amphiphilicity. There is an increasing body of literature on proteins at liquid interfaces, and here we only briefly discuss a few highlights. [Pg.542]

A study by Bames and co-workers of the equilibrium spreading behavior of dimyristol phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) reconciles the differences between spreading of bulk solids and dispersions of liposomes [41]. This study shows the formation of multibilayers below the monolayer at the air-water interface. An incipient phase separation, undetectable by microscopy, in DMPC-cholesterol... [Pg.544]

As has been noted, much of the interest in hlms of proteins, steroids, lipids, and so on, has a biological background. While studies at the air-water interface have been instructive, the natural systems approximate more closely to a water-oil interface. A fair amount of work has therefore been reported for such interfaces in spite of the greater experimental difhculties. [Pg.551]

Among the many applications of LB films, the creation or arrangement of colloidal particles in these films is a unique one. On one hand, colloidal particles such as 10-nm silver sols stabilized by oleic acid can be spread at the air-water interface and LB deposited to create unique optical and electrooptical properties for devices [185]. [Pg.561]

The SHG/SFG technique is not restricted to interface spectroscopy of the delocalized electronic states of solids. It is also a powerful tool for spectroscopy of electronic transitions in molecules. Figure Bl.5.13 presents such an example for a monolayer of the R-enantiomer of the molecule 2,2 -dihydroxyl-l,l -binaphthyl, (R)-BN, at the air/water interface [ ]. The spectra reveal two-photon resonance features near wavelengths of 332 and 340 mu that are assigned to the two lowest exciton-split transitions in the naphtli-2-ol... [Pg.1293]

Figure Bl.5.13 Spectra of the various non-chiral [p-in/p-oiit (filled circles) and s-in/p-oiit (filled diamonds)] and chiral [p-in/s-oiit (triangle)] SHG signals of (R)-BN molecules adsorbed at the air/water interface. (From [80].)... Figure Bl.5.13 Spectra of the various non-chiral [p-in/p-oiit (filled circles) and s-in/p-oiit (filled diamonds)] and chiral [p-in/s-oiit (triangle)] SHG signals of (R)-BN molecules adsorbed at the air/water interface. (From [80].)...
FigureBl.5.16 Rotational relaxation of Coumarin 314 molecules at the air/water interface. The change in the SFI signal is recorded as a fimction of the time delay between the pump and probe pulses. Anisotropy in the orientational distribution is created by linearly polarized pump radiation in two orthogonal directions in the surface. (After [90].)... FigureBl.5.16 Rotational relaxation of Coumarin 314 molecules at the air/water interface. The change in the SFI signal is recorded as a fimction of the time delay between the pump and probe pulses. Anisotropy in the orientational distribution is created by linearly polarized pump radiation in two orthogonal directions in the surface. (After [90].)...
Sitzmann E V and Eisenthal K B 1988 Picosecond dynamics of a chemical-reaction at the air-water interface studied by surface second-harmonic generation J. Phys. Chem. 92 4579-80... [Pg.1304]

Zimdars D, Dadap J I, Eisenthal K B and Heinz T F 1999 Anisotropic orientational motion of molecular adsorbates at the air-water interface J. Chem. Phys. 103 3425-33... [Pg.1304]

Zhao X L, Ong S W and Eisenthal K B 1993 Polarization of water-molecules at a charged interface. Second harmonic studies of charged monolayers at the air/water interface Chem. Phys. Lett. 202 513-20... [Pg.1305]

Nierengarten J-F, Schall C, Nicoud J-F, Fleinrich B and Guillen D 1998 Amphiphilic cyclic fullerene bisadducts synthesis and Langmuir films at the air-water interface Tetrahedron Lett. 39 5747-50... [Pg.2431]

Schwarz G 1996 Peptides at lipid bilayers and at the air/water interface Ber. Bunsenges. Rhys. Chem. 100 999-1003... [Pg.2847]

Determine whether there is a significant difference between the concentration of Zn + at the air-water interface and the sediment-water interface at a = 0.05. [Pg.101]

Fig. 29. Molecular recognition of an organized assembly at the air—water interface (184). Fig. 29. Molecular recognition of an organized assembly at the air—water interface (184).
Monolayers at the Air—Water Interface. Molecules that form monolayers at the water—air interface are called amphiphiles or surfactants (qv). Such molecules are insoluble in water. One end is hydrophilic, and therefore is preferentially immersed in the water the other end is hydrophobic, and preferentially resides in the air, or in a nonpolar solvent. A classic example of an amphiphile is stearic acid, C H COOH, wherein the long hydrocarbon... [Pg.531]

The monolayer resulting when amphiphilic molecules are introduced to the water—air interface was traditionally called a two-dimensional gas owing to what were the expected large distances between the molecules. However, it has become quite clear that amphiphiles self-organize at the air—water interface even at relatively low surface pressures (7—10). For example, x-ray diffraction data from a monolayer of heneicosanoic acid spread on a 0.5-mM CaCl2 solution at zero pressure (11) showed that once the barrier starts moving and compresses the molecules, the surface pressure, 7T, increases and the area per molecule, M, decreases. The surface pressure, ie, the force per unit length of the barrier (in N/m) is the difference between CJq, the surface tension of pure water, and O, that of the water covered with a monolayer. Where the total number of molecules and the total area that the monolayer occupies is known, the area per molecules can be calculated and a 7T-M isotherm constmcted. This isotherm (Fig. 2), which describes surface pressure as a function of the area per molecule (3,4), is rich in information on stabiUty of the monolayer at the water—air interface, the reorientation of molecules in the two-dimensional system, phase transitions, and conformational transformations. [Pg.531]

In tbe first attempt to prepare a two-dimensional crystalline polymer (45), Co y-radiation was used to initiate polymerization in monolayers of vinyl stearate (7). Polymerization at the air—water interface was possible but gave a rigid film. The monomeric monolayer was deposited to give X-type layers that could be polymerized in situ This polymerization reaction, quenched by oxygen, proceeds via a free-radical mechanism. [Pg.534]

Patterns of ordered molecular islands surrounded by disordered molecules are common in Langmuir layers, where even in zero surface pressure molecules self-organize at the air—water interface. The difference between the two systems is that in SAMs of trichlorosilanes the island is comprised of polymerized surfactants, and therefore the mobihty of individual molecules is restricted. This lack of mobihty is probably the principal reason why SAMs of alkyltrichlorosilanes are less ordered than, for example, fatty acids on AgO, or thiols on gold. The coupling of polymerization and surface anchoring is a primary source of the reproducibihty problems. Small differences in water content and in surface Si—OH group concentration may result in a significant difference in monolayer quahty. Alkyl silanes remain, however, ideal materials for surface modification and functionalization apphcations, eg, as adhesion promoters (166—168) and boundary lubricants (169—171). [Pg.538]

Under equiUbrium or near-equiUbrium conditions, the distribution of volatile species between gas and water phases can be described in terms of Henry s law. The rate of transfer of a compound across the water-gas phase boundary can be characterized by a mass-transfer coefficient and the activity gradient at the air—water interface. In addition, these substance-specific coefficients depend on the turbulence, interfacial area, and other conditions of the aquatic systems. They may be related to the exchange constant of oxygen as a reference substance for a system-independent parameter reaeration coefficients are often known for individual rivers and lakes. [Pg.218]

Fig.4.53. Experimental and simulated PM (polarization modulated) IRRAS spectra of single monolayers of (A) PEG and (B) K(LK)7 at the air-water interface. The surface pressure was 20 mN m [4.281],... Fig.4.53. Experimental and simulated PM (polarization modulated) IRRAS spectra of single monolayers of (A) PEG and (B) K(LK)7 at the air-water interface. The surface pressure was 20 mN m [4.281],...
Another interesting class of phase transitions is that of internal transitions within amphiphilic monolayers or bilayers. In particular, monolayers of amphiphiles at the air/water interface (Langmuir monolayers) have been intensively studied in the past as experimentally fairly accessible model systems [16,17]. A schematic phase diagram for long chain fatty acids, alcohols, or lipids is shown in Fig. 4. On increasing the area per molecule, one observes two distinct coexistence regions between fluid phases a transition from a highly diluted, gas -like phase into a more condensed liquid expanded phase, and a second transition into an even denser... [Pg.635]

A particularly simple lattice model has been utilized by Harris and Rice [129] and subsequently by Stettin et al. [130] to simulate Langmuir mono-layers at the air/water interface chains on a cubic lattice which are confined to a plane at one end. Haas et al. have used the bond-fluctuation model, a more sophisticated chain model which is common in polymer simulations, to study the same system [131]. Amphiphiles are modeled as short chains of monomers which occupy a cube of eight sites on a cubic lattice and are connected by bonds of variable length [132], At high surface coverage, Haas et al. report various lattice artefacts. They conclude that the study... [Pg.645]

Amphipathic lipids spontaneously form a variety of structures when added to aqueous solution. All these structures form in ways that minimize contact between the hydrophobic lipid chains and the aqueous milieu. For example, when small amounts of a fatty acid are added to an aqueous solution, a mono-layer is formed at the air-water interface, with the polar head groups in contact with the water surface and the hydrophobic tails in contact with the air (Figure 9.2). Few lipid molecules are found as monomers in solution. [Pg.261]

Shinkai [15] concluded that p-zert-butyl calix[n]ar-ene tetra esters form stable monolayers at the air-water interface and the metal responds, therein, quite differently from that in solution. They reported that examination of the metal template effect on the conformer distribution established that when the metal cation present in the base used serves as a template, the cone conformer results are predominant [16]. Hence, Na in... [Pg.340]


See other pages where At the air-water interface is mentioned: [Pg.271]    [Pg.416]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.551]    [Pg.1291]    [Pg.1297]    [Pg.2418]    [Pg.2429]    [Pg.2581]    [Pg.2609]    [Pg.2609]    [Pg.2850]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.535]    [Pg.545]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.251]   


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Air interface

Air/water interface

The Interface

The air

Water interface

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