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Precipitation and Micellar Properties of Novel Mixed Anionic Extended Surfactants and a Cationic Surfactant
Author(s) -
Panswad Donyaporn,
Sabatini David A.,
Khaodhiar Sutha
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of surfactants and detergents
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.349
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1558-9293
pISSN - 1097-3958
DOI - 10.1007/s11743-011-1282-3
Subject(s) - pulmonary surfactant , chemistry , cationic polymerization , ethylene oxide , surface tension , inorganic chemistry , critical micelle concentration , precipitation , micelle , thermodynamics of micellization , chemical engineering , organic chemistry , aqueous solution , copolymer , thermodynamics , polymer , biochemistry , physics , meteorology , engineering
Surfactant‐modified mineral surfaces can provide both a hydrophobic coating for adsorbing organic contaminants and, in the case of ionic surfactants, a charged exterior for adsorbing oppositely charged species. This research evaluates the precipitation phase boundaries and synergistic behavior of the mixtures of carboxylate‐based anionic extended surfactants with a pyridinium‐based cationic surfactant. One cationic surfactant (cetylpyridinium chloride) and four anionic extended surfactants were studied. The anionic surfactants studied were ethoxy carboxylate extended surfactants with average carbon chain lengths of either 16 and 17 or 16 and 18 with 4 mol of a propylene oxide group and a different number of moles of an ethylene oxide group (2 and 5 mol). Precipitation phase boundaries of mixed anionic extended surfactants and cationic surfactant were evaluated to ensure that the surface tension studies are in regions without precipitate. Surface tension measurements were conducted to evaluate the critical micelle concentration of individual and mixed surfactant systems. Precipitation phase boundaries of these novel mixed surfactant systems showed greatly reduced precipitation areas as compared to a conventional mixed surfactant system which is attributed to the presence of the ethylene oxide and propylene oxide groups and resulting steric hindrances to precipitation. Moreover, it was demonstrated that the CMC of mixed surfactant systems were much lower than that of individual surfactant systems. Synergism was evaluated in the four systems studied by the β parameter which found that all systems studied exhibited synergism. From these results, these novel mixed surfactant systems can greatly increase formulation space (reduce the precipitation region) while maintaining synergism, although slightly reduced from conventional anionic‐cationic mixtures reported previously.

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