Are Antagonistic Salts Surfactants?

It is well known that surfactants decrease both water/air and water/oil interfacial tensions whereas in contrast inorganic salts increase both. We study a new, third class of surface-active ionic solutes, which have been called antagonistic salts, consisting of an organic group with a small inorgani...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2015-01, Vol.31 (3), p.906-911
Hauptverfasser: Michler, Dominik, Shahidzadeh, Noushine, Westbroek, Marise, van Roij, René, Bonn, Daniel
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 906
container_title Langmuir
container_volume 31
creator Michler, Dominik
Shahidzadeh, Noushine
Westbroek, Marise
van Roij, René
Bonn, Daniel
description It is well known that surfactants decrease both water/air and water/oil interfacial tensions whereas in contrast inorganic salts increase both. We study a new, third class of surface-active ionic solutes, which have been called antagonistic salts, consisting of an organic group with a small inorganic counterion. These show decreased interfacial tension at the oil/water interface due to a redistribution of the organic group in the oil but do not show any surface activity at the air/water interface and are consequently different from surfactants that lower both tensions. We use a simple modeling using Poisson–Boltzmann theory that accounts for the surface activity of the antagonistic salt at the water/oil interface.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/la504801g
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title Are Antagonistic Salts Surfactants?
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