Leveiller F, Jacquemain D, Lahav M, Leiserowitz L, Deutsch M, Kjaer K, Als-Nielsen J
Science. 1991 Jun 14;252(5012):1532-6. doi: 10.1126/science.252.5012.1532.
A crystalline counterionic layer at the interface between an electrolyte solution and a charged layer of insoluble amphiphilic molecules was observed with grazing incidence synchrotron x-ray diffraction. Uncompressed arachidic films spread over 10(-3) molar cadmium chloride solution (pH 8.8) spontaneously form crystalline clusters with coherence lengths of approximately 1000 angstroms at 9 degrees C. Ten distinct diffraction peaks were observed, seven of which were attributed to scattering only from a crystalline Cd(2+) layer and the other three to scattering primarily from the arachidate layer. The reflections from the Cd(2+) layer were indexed according to a 2 x 3 supercell of the arachidate lattice with three Cd(2+) ions per cadmium unit cell.