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Abstract
Density measurement are reported for bilayer dispersions of a series of saturated
lecithins. For chain lengths with, respectively, 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18 carbons per
chain, the values for the volume changes at the main transition are 0.027, 0.031,
0.037, 0.040 and 0.045 ml/g. The main transition temperature extrapolates with increasing
chain length to the melting temperature of polyethylene. Volume changes at the lower
transition are an order of magnitude smaller than the main transition. Single phase
thermal expansion coefficients are also reported. The combination of X-ray data and
density data indicated that the volume changes are predominantly due to the hydrocarbon
chains, thus enabling the volume vCH2 of the methylene groups to be computed as a
function of temperature. From this and knowledge of intermolecular interactions in
hydrocarbon chains, the change in the interchain van der Waals energy, delta UvdW,
at the main transition is computed for the lecithins and also for the alkanes and
polyethylene at the melting transition. Using the experimental enthalpies of transition
and delta UvdW, the energy equation is consistently balanced for all three systems.
This yields estimates of the change in the number of gauche rotamers in the lecithins
at the main transition. The consistency of these calculations supports the conclusion
that the most important molecular energies for the main transition in lecithin bilayers
are the hydrocarbon chain interactions and the rotational isomeric energies, and the
conclusion that the main phase transition is analogous to the melting transition in
the alkanes from the hexagonal phase to the liquid phase, but with some modifications.