ABSTRACT

Microemulsions and most surfactants in dilute solutions and dispersions self-assemble into a variety of microstructures: spherical or wormlike micelles, swollen micelles, vesicles, and liposomes. Such systems are of biological and technological importance, e.g., in detergency, drug delivery, catalysis, enhanced oil recovery, flammability control, and nanoscale particle production. The macroscopic properties—rheology, surface tension, and conductivity—of these systems depend on their microstructure. As these microstructures are small (1–1000 nm) and sometimes several microstructures can coexist in the same solution, it is difficult to determine their structure. Conventional techniques like radiation scattering, although useful, provide only indirect evidence of microstructures, and the structures deduced are model-dependent.