Theory of surface micelles of semifluorinated alkanes

Langmuir. 2006 Oct 10;22(21):8703-17. doi: 10.1021/la060638+.

Abstract

Surface structures of semifluorinated alkanes F(CF(2))(n)(CH(2))(m)H (referred to as FnHm) spread on the air/water interface are investigated theoretically. The study is focused on the disklike surface micelles that were recently identified by AFM and scattering techniques at sufficiently high surface concentrations. We show that (1) the micelles emerge as a result of liquid/liquid (rather than liquid/gas) phase separation in the Langmuir layer; (2) the micelles are islands of the higher-density phase with roughly vertical orientation of FnHm molecules (F-parts extend toward air, H-parts toward water) and the matrix is the lower density-phase where the FnHm diblocks are nearly parallel to the water surface; (3) the micelles and the hexagonal structure they form are stabilized by the electrostatic interactions which are mainly due to the vertical dipole moments of the CF(2)- CH(2) bonds in the vertical phase; and (4) the electrostatic repulsive interactions can serve to suppress the micelle size polydispersity.