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Palmitic Acid Sophorolipid Biosurfactant: From Self-Assembled Fibrillar Network (SAFiN) To Hydrogels with Fast Recovery

Authors :
Baccile, Niki
Messaoud, Ghazi Ben
Griel, Patrick Le
Cowieson, Nathan
Perez, Javier
Geys, Robin
de Graeve, Marilyn
Roelants, Sophie
Soetaert, Wim
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Nanofibers are an interesting phase into which amphiphilic molecules can self-assemble. Described for a large number of synthetic lipids, they were seldom reported for natural lipids like microbial amphiphiles, known as biosurfactants. In this work, we show that the palmitic acid congener of sophorolipids (SLC16:0), one of the most studied families of biosurfactants, spontaneously forms a self-assembled fiber network (SAFiN) at pH below 6 through a pH jump process. pH-resolved in-situ Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS) shows a continuous micelle-to-fiber transition, characterized by an enhanced core-shell contrast between pH 9 and pH 7 and micellar fusion into flat membrane between pH 7 and pH 6, approximately. Below pH 6, homogeneous, infinitely long nanofibers form by peeling off the membranes. Eventually, the nanofiber network spontaneously forms a thixotropic hydrogel with fast recovery rates after applying an oscillatory strain amplitude out of the linear viscoelastic regime (LVER): after being submitted to strain amplitudes during 5 min, the hydrogel recovers about 80% and 100% of its initial elastic modulus after, respectively, 20 s and 10 min. Finally, the strength of the hydrogel depends on the medium's final pH, with an elastic modulus fivefold higher at pH 3 than at pH 6.<br />Comment: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. A (1887--1895), Royal Society, The, In press

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2102.11606
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2020.0343