Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Surfactant solutions, thermodynamics pseudo-phase model

Two principal approaches have been used to describe the thermodynamics of surfactant solutions — the pseudo-phase model and the mass action model. [Pg.343]

The Mass Action Model The mass action model represents a very different approach to the interpretation of the thermodynamic properties of a surfactant solution than does the pseudo-phase model presented in the previous section. A chemical equilibrium is assumed to exist between the monomer and the micelle. For this reaction an equilibrium constant can be written to relate the activity (concentrations) of monomer and micelle present. The most comprehensive treatment of this process is due to Burchfield and Woolley.22 We will now describe the procedure followed, although we will not attempt to fill in all the steps of the derivation. The aggregation of an anionic surfactant MA is approximated by a simple equilibrium in which the monomeric anion and cation combine to form one aggregate species (micelle) having an aggregation number n, with a fraction of bound counterions, f3. The reaction isdd... [Pg.349]

For a more detailed discussion of the pseudo-phase model, see J. E. Desnoyers and G. Perron, Thermodynamic methods , Chapter 1 in Surfactant Solutions New Methods of Investigation, R. Zana, Editor, Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, 1987. [Pg.357]

The purpose of this paper will be to develop a generalized treatment extending the earlier mixed micelle model (I4) to nonideal mixed surfactant monolayers in micellar systems. In this work, a thermodynamic model for nonionic surfactant mixtures is developed which can also be applied empirically to mixtures containing ionic surfactants. The form of the model is designed to allow for future generalization to multiple components, other interfaces and the treatment of contact angles. The use of the pseudo-phase separation approach and regular solution approximation are dictated by the requirement that the model be sufficiently tractable to be applied in realistic situations of interest. [Pg.103]


See other pages where Surfactant solutions, thermodynamics pseudo-phase model is mentioned: [Pg.430]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.228]   


SEARCH



Model solutions

Modeling phase

Phase surfactant

Pseudo-phase

Pseudo-phase model

Solutal model

Solute model

Surfactant model

Surfactant phases solutions

Surfactant solutions

Surfactant solutions, thermodynamics

Surfactant thermodynamics

Thermodynamic model

Thermodynamic modelings

Thermodynamic phase

Thermodynamics modeling

© 2024 chempedia.info