date: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.5 pdf:docinfo:title: Interfacial Dilational Viscoelasticity of Adsorption Layers at the Hydrocarbon/Water Interface: The Fractional Maxwell Model xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: In this communication, the single element version of the fractional Maxwell model (single-FMM or Scott?Blair model) is adopted to quantify the observed behavior of the linear interfacial dilational viscoelasticity. This mathematical tool is applied to the results obtained by capillary pressure experiments under low-gravity conditions aboard the International Space Station, for adsorption layers at the hydrocarbon/water interface. Two specific experimental sets of steady-state harmonic oscillations of interfacial area are reported, respectively: a drop of pure water into a Span-80 surfactant/paraffin-oil matrix and a pure n-hexane drop into a C13DMPO/TTAB mixed surfactants/aqueous-solution matrix. The fractional constitutive single-FMM is demonstrated to embrace the standard Maxwell model (MM) and the Lucassen?van-den-Tempel model (L?vdT), as particular cases. The single-FMM adequately fits the Span-80/paraffin-oil observed results, correctly predicting the frequency dependence of the complex viscoelastic modulus and the inherent phase-shift angle. In contrast, the single-FMM appears as a scarcely adequate tool to fit the observed behavior of the mixed-adsorption surfactants for the C13DMPO/TTAB/aqueous solution matrix (despite the single-FMM satisfactorily comparing to the phenomenology of the sole complex viscoelastic modulus). Further speculations are envisaged in order to devise combined FMM as rational guidance to interpret the properties and the interfacial structure of complex mixed surfactant adsorption systems. dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.5 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Interfacial Dilational Viscoelasticity of Adsorption Layers at the Hydrocarbon/Water Interface: The Fractional Maxwell Model modified: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z cp:subject: In this communication, the single element version of the fractional Maxwell model (single-FMM or Scott?Blair model) is adopted to quantify the observed behavior of the linear interfacial dilational viscoelasticity. This mathematical tool is applied to the results obtained by capillary pressure experiments under low-gravity conditions aboard the International Space Station, for adsorption layers at the hydrocarbon/water interface. Two specific experimental sets of steady-state harmonic oscillations of interfacial area are reported, respectively: a drop of pure water into a Span-80 surfactant/paraffin-oil matrix and a pure n-hexane drop into a C13DMPO/TTAB mixed surfactants/aqueous-solution matrix. The fractional constitutive single-FMM is demonstrated to embrace the standard Maxwell model (MM) and the Lucassen?van-den-Tempel model (L?vdT), as particular cases. The single-FMM adequately fits the Span-80/paraffin-oil observed results, correctly predicting the frequency dependence of the complex viscoelastic modulus and the inherent phase-shift angle. In contrast, the single-FMM appears as a scarcely adequate tool to fit the observed behavior of the mixed-adsorption surfactants for the C13DMPO/TTAB/aqueous solution matrix (despite the single-FMM satisfactorily comparing to the phenomenology of the sole complex viscoelastic modulus). Further speculations are envisaged in order to devise combined FMM as rational guidance to interpret the properties and the interfacial structure of complex mixed surfactant adsorption systems. pdf:docinfo:subject: In this communication, the single element version of the fractional Maxwell model (single-FMM or Scott?Blair model) is adopted to quantify the observed behavior of the linear interfacial dilational viscoelasticity. This mathematical tool is applied to the results obtained by capillary pressure experiments under low-gravity conditions aboard the International Space Station, for adsorption layers at the hydrocarbon/water interface. Two specific experimental sets of steady-state harmonic oscillations of interfacial area are reported, respectively: a drop of pure water into a Span-80 surfactant/paraffin-oil matrix and a pure n-hexane drop into a C13DMPO/TTAB mixed surfactants/aqueous-solution matrix. The fractional constitutive single-FMM is demonstrated to embrace the standard Maxwell model (MM) and the Lucassen?van-den-Tempel model (L?vdT), as particular cases. The single-FMM adequately fits the Span-80/paraffin-oil observed results, correctly predicting the frequency dependence of the complex viscoelastic modulus and the inherent phase-shift angle. In contrast, the single-FMM appears as a scarcely adequate tool to fit the observed behavior of the mixed-adsorption surfactants for the C13DMPO/TTAB/aqueous solution matrix (despite the single-FMM satisfactorily comparing to the phenomenology of the sole complex viscoelastic modulus). Further speculations are envisaged in order to devise combined FMM as rational guidance to interpret the properties and the interfacial structure of complex mixed surfactant adsorption systems. pdf:docinfo:creator: Giuseppe Loglio, Volodymyr I. Kovalchuk, Alexey G. Bykov, Michele Ferrari, Jürgen Krägel, Libero Liggieri, Reinhard Miller, Boris A. Noskov, Piero Pandolfini, Francesca Ravera and Eva Santini PTEX.Fullbanner: This is pdfTeX, Version 3.14159265-2.6-1.40.18 (TeX Live 2017/W32TeX) kpathsea version 6.2.3 meta:author: Giuseppe Loglio, Volodymyr I. Kovalchuk, Alexey G. Bykov, Michele Ferrari, Jürgen Krägel, Libero Liggieri, Reinhard Miller, Boris A. Noskov, Piero Pandolfini, Francesca Ravera and Eva Santini trapped: False meta:creation-date: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z created: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z Author: Giuseppe Loglio, Volodymyr I. Kovalchuk, Alexey G. Bykov, Michele Ferrari, Jürgen Krägel, Libero Liggieri, Reinhard Miller, Boris A. Noskov, Piero Pandolfini, Francesca Ravera and Eva Santini producer: pdfTeX-1.40.18 pdf:docinfo:producer: pdfTeX-1.40.18 pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 17 Keywords: fractional Maxwell model; interfacial dilational viscoelasticity; mixed surfactant adsorption layer; water/paraffin-oil and water/hexane interface; drop oscillations; capillary pressure tensiometry; microgravity access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Giuseppe Loglio, Volodymyr I. Kovalchuk, Alexey G. Bykov, Michele Ferrari, Jürgen Krägel, Libero Liggieri, Reinhard Miller, Boris A. Noskov, Piero Pandolfini, Francesca Ravera and Eva Santini dcterms:created: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z Last-Modified: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z dcterms:modified: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z title: Interfacial Dilational Viscoelasticity of Adsorption Layers at the Hydrocarbon/Water Interface: The Fractional Maxwell Model Last-Save-Date: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z pdf:docinfo:keywords: fractional Maxwell model; interfacial dilational viscoelasticity; mixed surfactant adsorption layer; water/paraffin-oil and water/hexane interface; drop oscillations; capillary pressure tensiometry; microgravity pdf:docinfo:modified: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z meta:save-date: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z pdf:docinfo:custom:PTEX.Fullbanner: This is pdfTeX, Version 3.14159265-2.6-1.40.18 (TeX Live 2017/W32TeX) kpathsea version 6.2.3 Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Giuseppe Loglio, Volodymyr I. Kovalchuk, Alexey G. Bykov, Michele Ferrari, Jürgen Krägel, Libero Liggieri, Reinhard Miller, Boris A. Noskov, Piero Pandolfini, Francesca Ravera and Eva Santini dc:subject: fractional Maxwell model; interfacial dilational viscoelasticity; mixed surfactant adsorption layer; water/paraffin-oil and water/hexane interface; drop oscillations; capillary pressure tensiometry; microgravity access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 13 pdf:charsPerPage: 2971 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true pdf:docinfo:trapped: False meta:keyword: fractional Maxwell model; interfacial dilational viscoelasticity; mixed surfactant adsorption layer; water/paraffin-oil and water/hexane interface; drop oscillations; capillary pressure tensiometry; microgravity access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2019-12-10T11:31:58Z