Effects of Counterion on the Formation and Hydration Behavior of α-Form Hydrated Crystals (α-Gels)

Gels. 2023 Nov 25;9(12):928. doi: 10.3390/gels9120928.

Abstract

α-Form hydrated crystals form a lamellar gel in which the alkyl chains of the amphiphilic molecules are hexagonally arranged within bilayers below the gel-liquid crystal phase transition temperature. In practice, the lamellar gel network with excess water is called an "α-gel", particularly in the cosmetics industry. In this study, the hydration or water sorption of amphiphilic materials in water vapor was assessed using a humidity-controlled quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) technique. The amphiphilic materials used in this study were hexadecyl phosphate salts neutralized with L-arginine (C16P-Arg), CsOH (C16P-Cs), KOH (C16P-K), and NaOH (C16P-Na). Small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering measurements revealed that C16P-Arg and C16P-Cs yielded α-form hydrated crystals. Humidity-controlled QCM-D measurements demonstrated that C16P-Arg and C16P-Cs more readily underwent hydration or water sorption than C16P-K and C16P-Na. The key conclusion is that the significant hydration ability of C16P-Arg and C16P-Cs promotes the formation of the corresponding α-form hydrated crystals.

Keywords: counterion; humidity; hydration; lamellar gel; quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D); surfactant; water sorption; α-form hydrated crystal; α-gel.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.