Cs. Kotsmar
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Cs. Kotsmar.
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2009
Cs. Kotsmar; V. Pradines; V.S. Alahverdjieva; E.V. Aksenenko; Valentin B. Fainerman; V.I. Kovalchuk; J. Krägel; Martin E. Leser; Boris A. Noskov; R. Miller
Depending on the bulk composition, adsorption layers formed from mixed protein/surfactant solutions contain different amounts of protein. Clearly, increasing amounts of surfactant should decrease the amount of adsorbed proteins successively. However, due to the much larger adsorption energy, proteins are rather strongly bound to the interface and via competitive adsorption surfactants cannot easily displace proteins. A thermodynamic theory was developed recently which describes the composition of mixed protein/surfactant adsorption layers. This theory is based on models for the single compounds and allows a prognosis of the resulting mixed layers by using the characteristic parameters of the involved components. This thermodynamic theory serves also as the respective boundary condition for the dynamics of adsorption layers formed from mixed solutions and their dilational rheological behaviour. Based on experimental studies with milk proteins (beta-casein and beta-lactoglobulin) mixed with non-ionic (decyl and dodecyl dimethyl phosphine oxide) and ionic (sodium dodecyl sulphate and dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide) surfactants at the water/air and water/hexane interfaces, the potential of the theoretical tools is demonstrated. The displacement of pre-adsorbed proteins by subsequently added surfactant can be successfully studied by a special experimental technique based on a drop volume exchange. In this way the drop profile analysis can provide tensiometry and dilational rheology data (via drop oscillation experiments) for two adsorption routes--sequential adsorption of the single compounds in addition to the traditional simultaneous adsorption from a mixed solution. Complementary measurements of the surface shear rheology and the adsorption layer thickness via ellipsometry are added in order to support the proposed mechanisms drawn from tensiometry and dilational rheology, i.e. to show that the formation of mixed adsorption layer is based on a modification of the protein molecules via electrostatic (ionic) and/or hydrophobic interactions by the surfactant molecules and a competitive adsorption of the resulting complexes with the free, unbound surfactant. Under certain conditions, the properties of the sequentially formed layers differ from those formed simultaneously, which can be explained by the different locations of complex formation.
Langmuir | 2008
Cs. Kotsmar; D. O. Grigoriev; F. Xu; E.V. Aksenenko; V. B. Fainerman; Martin E. Leser; R. Miller
Ellipsometry and surface profile analysis tensiometry were used to study and compare the adsorption behavior of beta-lactoglobulin (BLG)/C10DMPO, beta-casein (BCS)/C10DMPO and BCS/C12DMPO mixtures at the air/solution interface. The adsorption from protein/surfactant mixed solutions is of competitive nature. The obtained adsorption isotherms suggest a gradual replacement of the protein molecules at the interface with increasing surfactant concentration for all studied mixed systems. The thickness, refractive index, and the adsorbed amount of the respective adsorption layers, determined by ellipsometry, decrease monotonically and reach values close to those for a surface covered only by surfactant molecules, indicating the absence of proteins from a certain surfactant concentration on. These results correlate with the surface tension data. A continuous increase of adsorption layer thickness was observed up to this concentration, caused by the desorption of segments of the protein and transforming the thin surface layer into a rather diffuse and thick one. Replacement and structural changes of the protein molecules are discussed in terms of protein structure and surface activity of surfactant molecules. Theoretical models derived recently were used for the quantitative description of the equilibrium state of the mixed surface layers.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009
Cs. Kotsmar; J. Krägel; V. I. Kovalchuk; E.V. Aksenenko; V. B. Fainerman; R. Miller
The present study deals with dilational and shear rheological properties of adsorption layers of the milk protein beta-casein (BCS) mixed with the nonionic dodecyl dimethyl phosphine oxide (C12DMPO) and the positively charged dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide (DoTAB), respectively. The drop profile analysis tensiometer PAT-1 was applied for the dilational rheological studies at low frequency harmonic relaxations. A special modification of the setup, consisting of a coaxial capillary combined with a double dosing system, provides exchange of the drop volume during experiments. This arrangement offers a unique protocol for studies of mixed surface layers, formed by sequential adsorption of the individual compounds. The dilational viscoelastic modulus and the dilational viscosity of the mixed layers, built-up in the two different ways, were investigated and compared. The features of the mixed surface layers drawn from the dilational rheology are qualitatively confirmed by the shear rheological parameters measured by torsion shear rheometry ISR-1. Recently derived theoretical models were used for a quantitative description of the equilibrium state and dilational rheology of the surface layers formed by the single components and their mixtures.
Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects | 2008
James K. Ferri; Nikolce Gorevski; Cs. Kotsmar; Martin E. Leser; R. Miller
Colloid and Polymer Science | 2008
Cs. Kotsmar; D. O. Grigoriev; A. V. Makievski; James K. Ferri; J. Krägel; R. Miller; H. Möhwald
Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects | 2012
R. Wüstneck; V. B. Fainerman; E.V. Aksenenko; Cs. Kotsmar; V. Pradines; J. Krägel; R. Miller
Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects | 2010
Cs. Kotsmar; E.V. Aksenenko; V. B. Fainerman; V. Pradines; J. Krägel; R. Miller
Food Hydrocolloids | 2009
Cs. Kotsmar; D. Arabadzhieva; Khr. Khristov; Elena Mileva; D. O. Grigoriev; R. Miller; D. Exerowa
Nanoscale phenomena ands structures | 2008
R. Miller; V.S. Alahverdjieva; D. Arabadzhieva; Roumen Todorov; Cs. Kotsmar; J. Krägel; Plamen Tchoukov; Elena Mileva; Khristo Khristov; D. Exerowa
Recent Trends in Surface and Colloid Science | 2012
V.S. Alahverdjieva; D. O. Grigoriev; A. Javadi; Cs. Kotsmar; J. Krägel; A. V. Makievski; R. Miller; V. Pradines