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Can adding oil control domain formation in binary amphiphile bilayers?

Version 4 2024-03-12, 14:00
Version 3 2023-10-29, 10:26
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 14:00 authored by Martin GreenallMartin Greenall, Carlos M. Marques
<p>Bilayers formed of two species of amphiphile of different chain lengths may segregate into thinner and thicker domains composed predominantly of the respective species. Using a coarse-grained mean-field model, we investigate how mixing oil with the amphiphiles affects the structure and thickness of the bilayer at and on either side of the boundary between two neighbouring domains. In particular, we find that oil molecules whose chain length is close to that of the shorter amphiphiles segregate to the thicker domain. This smooths the surface of the hydrophobic bilayer core on this side of the boundary, reducing its area and curvature and their associated free-energy penalties. The smoothing effect is weaker for oil molecules that are shorter or longer than this optimum value: short molecules spread evenly through the bilayer, while long molecules swell the thicker domain, increasing the surface area and curvature of the bilayer core in the interfacial region. Our results show that adding an appropriate oil could make the formation of domain boundaries more or less favourable, raising the possibility of controlling the domain size distribution.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Mathematics and Physics (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Soft Matter

Volume

10

Issue

40

Pages/Article Number

7925-7931

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

ISSN

1744-683X

eISSN

1744-6848

Date Submitted

2015-12-11

Date Accepted

2014-07-25

Date of First Publication

2014-07-25

Date of Final Publication

2014-10-28

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-12-11

ePrints ID

19796

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