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Surfactant coacervates

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Surfactant coacervates are dense, surfactant-rich liquid phases that form via liquid–liquid phase separation when surfactant mixtures in water cross certain concentration, composition, or ionic conditions, yielding a coexisting pair of liquids: a concentrated coacervate phase and a dilute aqueous phase. In the context of this work, these coacervate phases are used as engineered water microenvironments surrounding photocatalysts to improve solar hydrogen evolution.[1][6]

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Researchers led by Xiaojuan Bai demonstrate that surfactant coacervates can engineer water microenvironments to boost solar hydrogen production efficiency and stability.

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