2008 Annual Meeting
(221b) Micelle's Role in Contributing to Reduce the Dynamic Surface Tension at An Air/Water Interface
Authors
In this paper, the theory and experimental study of the surfactant transport from the micelle solution includes the novel route that micelle can directly adsorb onto the interface and then break up into monomers which can be incorporated into the surface monolayer later. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) study using confocal laser scanning microscope is carried out to show the experimental evidence of the micelle direct adsorption. The FRET donor (NBD labeled phospholipid) is spread on a clean air/water interface of a pure water layer. The FRET acceptor (Nile red) is incorporated into micelle core of Hexaethylene glycol monotetradcyl ether surfactant (C14E6). After the introduction of the acceptor labeled micelle solution underneath the excited-donor labeled air water interface, FRET emission with excited acceptor single is detected by confocal. The excited acceptor has to be in the vicinity of the donor (on the surface) to be excited, and the acceptor can only be transported onto the surface by the direct micelle adsorption route, in which micelle direct adsorb onto the surface, break up and release the acceptor, which than can be incorporated into the surface monolayer.