Publication | Open Access
Low-Surface Energy Surfactants with Branched Hydrocarbon Architectures
102
Citations
49
References
2014
Year
Surface tensiometry and small-angle neutron scattering have been used to characterize a new class of low-surface energy surfactants (LSESs), "hedgehog" surfactants. These surfactants are based on highly branched hydrocarbon (HC) chains as replacements for environmentally hazardous fluorocarbon surfactants and polymers. Tensiometric analyses indicate that a subtle structural modification in the tails and headgroup results in significant effects on limiting surface tensions γcmc at the critical micelle concentration: a higher level of branching and an increased counterion size promote an effective reduction of surface tension to low values for HC surfactants (γcmc ∼ 24 mN m(-1)). These LSESs present a new class of potentially very important materials, which form lamellar aggregates in aqueous solutions independent of dilution.
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