Interaction of the Acid Soap of Triethanolamine Stearate and Stearic Acid with Water
Posted on 2007-02-08 - 00:00
Stearic acid and triethanolamine (TEA) in a molar ratio of 2:1 were mixed in aqueous solution at 80 °C and
subsequently cooled to ambient temperature. The structural evolution of the resultant sample during storage
was characterized by using light microscopy, Cryo-SEM, differential scanning calorimetery, pH, infrared
spectroscopy, elemental analysis, and simultaneous small and wide-angle X-ray diffraction. It was found that
a lamellar liquid crystalline phase was formed when stearic acid and TEA solution were mixed at 80 °C and
multilamellar spheres of a few microns diameter were formed initially after cooling. A hydrolysis reaction
(i.e., the reverse reaction of neutralization between stearic acid and TEA) occurred thereafter that caused the
breakdown of the lamellar gel phase and the formation of platelet stearic acid crystals. Three polymorphs of
stearic acid (defined following previous work as the A, C, and E forms) were formed as the result of hydrolysis
reaction, which gave rise to a strong optically pearlescent appearance.
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Zhu, S.; D. A. Pudney, P.; Heppenstall-Butler, M.; Butler, M. F.; Ferdinando, D.; Kirkland, M. (2016). Interaction of the Acid Soap of Triethanolamine Stearate and Stearic Acid with Water. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp0659047