Gelled Lyotropic Liquid Crystals

In our previous work we were able to prove that gelled bicontinuous microemulsions are a novel type of orthogonal self-assembled system. The study at hand aims at complementing our previous work by answering the question of whether gelled lyotropic liquid crystals are also orthogonal self-assembled...

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Published inLangmuir Vol. 31; no. 31; pp. 8589 - 8598
Main Authors Xu, Yang, Laupheimer, Michaela, Preisig, Natalie, Sottmann, Thomas, Schmidt, Claudia, Stubenrauch, Cosima
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 11.08.2015
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Summary:In our previous work we were able to prove that gelled bicontinuous microemulsions are a novel type of orthogonal self-assembled system. The study at hand aims at complementing our previous work by answering the question of whether gelled lyotropic liquid crystals are also orthogonal self-assembled systems. For this purpose we studied the same system, namely, water–n-decane/12-hydroxy­octa­decanoic acid (12-HOA)–n-decyl tetra­oxy­ethylene glycol ether (C10E4). The phase boundaries of the nongelled and the gelled lyotropic liquid crystals were determined visually and with 2H NMR spectroscopy. Oscillating shear measurements revealed that the absolute values of the storage and loss moduli of the gelled liquid crystalline (LC) phases do not differ very much from those of the binary organogel. While both the phase behavior and the rheological properties of the LC phases support the hypothesis that gelled lyotropic liquid crystals are orthogonal self-assembled systems, freeze–fracture electron microscopy (FFEM) seems to indicate an influence of the gel network on the structure of the Lα phase and vice versa.
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ISSN:0743-7463
1520-5827
DOI:10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b01992