Critical Micelle Concentrations in Surfactant Mixtures and Blends by Simulation

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Abstract

We explore the use of coarse-grained dissipative particle dynamics simulations to predict critical micelle concentrations (CMCs) in polydisperse surfactant mixtures and blends. By fitting pseudo-phase separation models (PSMs) to aqueous solutions of binary surfactant mixtures at selected compositions above the CMC, we avoid the need for expensive simulations of more complex multicomponent mixtures performed as a function of dilution. The approach is demonstrated for sodium laureth sulfate (SLES) surfactants with polydispersity in the ethoxylate spacer. For this system, we find a modest degree of cooperativity in micelle formation, which we attribute to the reduced repulsion between charged headgroups for surfactants with dissimilar ethoxylate spacer lengths. However, this is insufficient to explain the lowered CMC often observed in commercial SLES samples, which we attribute to the presence of small amounts of unsulfated alkyl ethoxylates and/or traces of salt.

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Del Regno, A., Warren, P. B., Bray, D. J., & Anderson, R. L. (2021). Critical Micelle Concentrations in Surfactant Mixtures and Blends by Simulation. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 125(22), 5983–5990. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c00893

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