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Hydrophobic droplets in amphiphilic bilayers: a coarse-grained mean-field theory study

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>Hydrophobic molecules such as oils and certain drugs can be encapsulated between the two leaflets of an amphiphilic bilayer in both lipid and polymer systems. We investigate the case where the hydrophobic molecules are incompatible with the amphiphile tails and so form droplets. Using a coarse-grained mean-field model (self-consistent field theory, or SCFT), we find that droplets of a wide range of sizes have the same characteristic lens shape, and explain this result in terms of simple capillarity arguments, consistent with the measured variations of surface concentrations of amphiphile in the bilayer and in the monolayers that cover the droplet. We study the effect of the strength chi(BO) of the repulsion between the hydrophobic liquid and the amphiphile tails on the droplet shape, and find a gradual flattening of the droplet as chi(BO) is reduced. The droplet remains at least metastable even at very low values of chi(BO). This is in contrast to the behavior as the length of the hydrophobic molecules is varied. Specifically, if these molecules are at least as long as the amphiphile tails, increasing their length further is found to have little effect on the droplet shape, while reducing their length below this value quickly causes the droplet to become unstable.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Mathematics and Physics (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Soft Matter

Volume

8

Issue

12

Pages/Article Number

3308-3314

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

ISSN

1744-683X

eISSN

1744-6848

Date Submitted

2015-12-11

Date Accepted

2012-01-16

Date of First Publication

2012-02-13

Date of Final Publication

2012-03-28

Date Document First Uploaded

2015-12-11

ePrints ID

19799

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