Premium
Solubilisation study of water‐insoluble dye in cationic single/dimeric surfactant micelles: effect of headgroup, non‐polar tail, and spacer chain in aqueous and salt solution
Author(s) -
Padasala Shailesh,
Kuperkar Ketan,
Bahadur Pratap
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
coloration technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.297
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1478-4408
pISSN - 1472-3581
DOI - 10.1111/cote.12208
Subject(s) - pulmonary surfactant , chemistry , micelle , critical micelle concentration , cationic polymerization , aqueous solution , thermodynamics of micellization , salt (chemistry) , methyl orange , adsorption , chromatography , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , photocatalysis , biochemistry , catalysis
The solubilisation of hydrophobic azo dye Orange OT in aqueous/salt solution in several cationic surfactant micelles was studied using UV‐vis spectroscopy. An attempt was made to correlate dye solubilising strength with adsorption/micellar characteristics. In our experiments we determined the change in solubilisation of hydrophobic dye when added to an aqueous solution of oppositely charged quaternary‐salt‐based cationic surfactants (conventional and gemini) and remarked on the probable location of the solubilised dye in the surfactant micelle. Results highlight the onset of dye solubilisation around the critical micelle concentration of each surfactant, which is influenced by the non‐polar tail, spacer, and polar headgroup, while no dye could be solubilised at concentrations below the critical micelle concentration. Orange OT solubilised almost linearly with increase in surfactant concentration at and above the critical micelle concentration. The change in colour intensity of the dye (darker below the critical micelle concentration, lighter at and above the critical micelle concentration) could be attributed to dye–surfactant interactions. Further dye solubilisation was observed in the presence of salt.