Viscosity increase with temperature in cationic surfactant solutions due to the growth of wormlike micelles
Gokul C. Kalur, Bradley D. Frounfelker, Bani H. Cipriano, Alexander I. Norman, and Srinivasa R. Raghavan
Wormlike
micellar solutions based on ionic surfactants typically show an
exponential
decrease in viscosity upon heating. Here, we report the unusual
observation of
an increasing viscosity with temperature in certain cationic wormlike
micellar
solutions. The solutions contain a cationic surfactant with an erucyl
(C[22],
mono-unsaturated) tail and an organic salt, sodium hydroxynaphthalene
carboxylate
(SHNC). When these solutions are heated,their zero-shear viscosity
increases
over a range of temperatures. In some cases, the viscosity reaches a
peak at a
certain temperature and then decreases with further heating. The
magnitude of
the viscosity increase, the onset of this increase, and the peak
temperature
can all be tuned by varying the SHNC concentration. Small-angle neutron
scattering is used to study the origin of this unusual rheological
behavior.
The data reveal that the contour length of the micelles increases with
temperature, in tandem with the rise in viscosity. A possible
explanation for
the contour length increase, is based on a temperature-dependent
counterion
binding.