Abstract
Water/oil microemulsions (w/o ME) constituted by water, soybean oil, SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate) and several short-chain alcohols were characterized from the viewpoint of its physical-chemical and electroanalytical properties. Different co-surfactants and surfactant:co-surfactant ratios were used, and the ME with the most favourable composition was used to study the kinetics of redox processes. For this purpose, cyclic voltammetry measurements using a Pt disk working ultramicroelectrode, an Ag/AgCl reference electrode and a Pt auxiliary electrode, and ferrocene as a probe, were performed. It was verified that the thermodynamic stability of the MEs increases with the co-surfactant content. The molecular structure and water solubility of the co-surfactant affect the electrical conductivity and the hydrodynamic radio of the MEs. Owing to the low diffusion coefficients verified in the MEs, measurements in transient state using conventional sweeping rates could be performed. Ferrocene oxidation in the ME has been demonstrated to proceed in quasi-reversibility conditions. Thus, the possibility of carrying out studies of cyclic voltammetry in vegetable oils under the w/o ME form was demonstrated. ©2008 Sociedade Brasileira de Química.
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Mendonça, C. R. B., Bica, C. I. D., Simó-Alfonso, E. F., Ramis-Ramos, G., & Piatnicki, C. M. S. (2008). Physical chemical properties and kinetics of redox processes in water/soybean oil microemulsions. In Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society (Vol. 19, pp. 775–781). Sociedade Brasileira de Quimica. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-50532008000400023
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