Environmental Chemistry | 2021

Complexes of humic acid with cationic surfactants support the supramolecular view of extracted humic matter

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Environmental context The molecular organisation of humic substances is key to understanding various natural and engineered processes, such as metal speciation and bioavailability. Two main models have been proposed: polymeric organisation and supramolecular organisation. A physicochemical approach, based on the interaction of humic acid with increasing amounts of cationic surfactants, leads to a sequence of molecular structures that provides support to the supramolecular view of humic organisation. Abstract The structural organisation of extracted humic matter, polymeric or supramolecular, has been a long-standing controversial issue. In this paper, we show that the interaction between a reference humic material, the Suwannee River Humic Acid (SRHA), and a homologous series of cationic surfactants (n-alkyl trimethyl ammonium chloride) provides key insights to resolve the controversy. By combining measurements of turbidity, electrophoretic mobility, surface tension and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, we show that: (i) the binding of cationic surfactant to the anionic humic acid is initially triggered by electrostatic interactions; (ii) the contrasting evolution of turbidity–surfactant concentration curves implies that the surfactant alkyl chain interacts with the hydrophobic moieties of humic matter from very low concentrations of surfactant; (iii) a drastic restructuring of humic matter occurs on surfactant binding, which brings out supplementary anionic humic sites; (iv) in the presence of C12 cationic surfactant, SRHA spontaneously forms stable nanoscale unilamellar vesicles, which, in addition to the high surface activity of complexes, could be of interest in the remediation of oil-contaminated environments; (v) the sequence of molecular structures obtained from SRHA with increasing amounts of C12-cationic surfactant – humic-rich vesicles, aggregates, surfactant-rich vesicles – bears striking similarities with the phase behaviour of aqueous mixtures of anionic and cationic surfactants, thus supporting the supramolecular view of humic structure.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1071/en21031
Language English
Journal Environmental Chemistry

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