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Preconcentration, versus separation

A plot of the temperatures required for clouding versus surfactant concentration typically exhibits a minimum in the case of nonionic surfactants (or a maximum in the case of zwitterionics) in its coexistence curve, with the temperature and surfactant concentration at which the minimum (or maximum) occurs being referred to as the critical temperature and concentration, respectively. This type of behavior is also exhibited by other nonionic surfactants, that is, nonionic polymers, // - a I k y I s u I Any lalcoh o I s, hydroxymethyl or ethyl celluloses, dimethylalkylphosphine oxides, or, most commonly, alkyl (or aryl) polyoxyethylene ethers. Likewise, certain zwitterionic surfactant solutions can also exhibit critical behavior in which an upper rather than a lower consolute boundary is present. Previously, metal ions (in the form of metal chelate complexes) were extracted and enriched from aqueous media using such a cloud point extraction approach with nonionic surfactants. Extraction efficiencies in excess of 98% for such metal ion extraction techniques were achieved with enrichment factors in the range of 45-200. In addition to metal ion enrichments, this type of micellar cloud point extraction approach has been reported to be useful for the separation of hydrophobic from hydrophilic proteins, both originally present in an aqueous solution, and also for the preconcentration of the former type of proteins. [Pg.452]

Extraction can be used to separate and preconcentrate the analyte component(s), to recover valuable components from aqueous solutions (hydrometallurgy, biotechnology), and also to determine the stoichiometry of extracted complexes. In the latter case, the relations log D versus pH and log D versus logHL are considered, and the composition of the complex can be determined from the slopes of the linear parts of these relationships. [Pg.1171]


See other pages where Preconcentration, versus separation is mentioned: [Pg.1092]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.422]    [Pg.429]    [Pg.429]    [Pg.484]    [Pg.454]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.223 ]




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