Analytical Sciences


Abstract − Analytical Sciences, 31(10), 1019 (2015).

Kinetic Study of Interaction between Solute Molecule and Surfactant Micelle
Kanji MIYABE, Ryohei TAKAHASHI, and Youki SHIMAZAKI
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Rikkyo University, 3-34-1 Nishi-Ikebukuro, Toshima, Tokyo 171-8501, Japan
We developed moment analysis of affinity kinetics by chromatographic capillary electrophoresis (MKCCE) method for the kinetic study of intermolecular interactions. Association and dissociation rate constants of the interaction in a micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) system between thymol and sodium dodecylsulfate micelle were determined by the MKCCE method. It is a method based on the moment theory for the kinetic study of intermolecular interactions under the conditions that neither immobilization nor chemical modification of molecules is required. In CCE mode, experimental conditions are controlled so that the migration of solute-micelle complex is stopped and only solute molecules migrate in a capillary. Mass transfer behavior of solute molecules in the CCE system is analogous to that in a chromatographic system. However, because it was difficult in practice to really perform CE experiments under the CCE conditions, CE data were measured with changing experimental conditions, i.e., applied pressure, under the conditions that the migration velocity of solute-micelle complex was around zero. The rate constants could be analytically determined from the CE data. In the MKCCE method, it is not necessary to fit elution curves numerically calculated to those experimentally measured for the determination of the rate constants. Regarding the interaction between thymol and SDS micelles, association equilibrium constant and association and dissociation rate constants were determined as 6.35 × 103 dm3 mol−1, 5.6 × 104 dm3 mol−1 s−1, and 8.7 s−1, respectively. It was demonstrated that the MKCCE method was effective for the kinetic study of intermolecular interactions.