JOURNAL ARTICLE

Mechanism of Surfactant Micelle Formation

Xiaohong CuiShizhen MaoMaili LiuHanzhen YuanYouru Du

Year: 2008 Journal:   Langmuir Vol: 24 (19)Pages: 10771-10775   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

The mechanism of micelle formation of surfactants sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), n-hexyldecyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and Triton X-100 (TX-100) in heavy water solutions was studied by 1H NMR (chemical shift and line shape) and NMR self-diffusion experiments. 1H NMR and self-diffusion experiments of these three surfactants show that their chemical shifts (delta) begin to change and resonance peaks begins to broaden with the increase in concentration significantly below their critical micelle concentrations (cmc's). At the same time, self-diffusion coefficients ( D) of the surfactant molecules decrease simultaneously as their concentrations increase. These indicate that when the concentrations are near and lower than their cmc's, there are oligomers (premicelles) formed in these three surfactant systems. Carefully examining the dependence of chemical shift and self-diffusion coefficient on concentration in the region just slightly above their cmc's, one finds that the pseudophase transition model is not applicable to the variation of physical properties (chemical shift and self-diffusion coefficient) with concentration of these systems. This indicates that premicelles still exist in this concentration region along with the formation of micelles. The curved dependence of chemical shift and self-diffusion coefficient on the increase in concentration suggests that the premicelles grow as the concentration increases until a definite value when the size of the premicelle reaches that of the micelle, i.e., the system is likely dominated by the monomers and micelles. Additionally, the approximate values of premicelle coming forth concentration (pmc) and cmc were obtained by again fitting chemical shifts to reciprocals of concentrations at a different perspective, and are in good accordant with experimental results and literature values and prove the former conclusion.

Keywords:
Micelle Critical micelle concentration Pulmonary surfactant Chemistry Self-diffusion Diffusion Chemical shift Sodium dodecyl sulfate Molecule Bromide Pulsed field gradient Thermodynamics of micellization Analytical Chemistry (journal) Physical chemistry Inorganic chemistry Organic chemistry Aqueous solution Thermodynamics

Metrics

309
Cited By
6.74
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
18
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Surfactants and Colloidal Systems
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Organic Chemistry
Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
NMR spectroscopy and applications
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Nuclear and High Energy Physics

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Mechanism of the Mixed Surfactant Micelle Formation

Xiaohong CuiYan JiangChunsheng YangXingyu LuHong ChenShizhen MaoMaili LiuHanzhen YuanPingya LuoYouru Du

Journal:   The Journal of Physical Chemistry B Year: 2010 Vol: 114 (23)Pages: 7808-7816
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Surfactant-alcohol mixed-micelle formation

Panagiotis LianosR. Zana

Journal:   Chemical Physics Letters Year: 1980 Vol: 72 (1)Pages: 171-175
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Micelle Formation in the Surfactant Solutions

Mitsuru Tanaka

Journal:   Journal of Japan Oil Chemists Society Year: 1985 Vol: 34 (3)Pages: 206-211
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Micelle Formation in the Surfactant Solutions

Mitsuru Tanaka

Journal:   Journal of Japan Oil Chemists Society Year: 1985 Vol: 34 (4)Pages: 296-306
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Surfactant−Surfactant Interactions in Mixed Monolayer and Mixed Micelle Formation

Milton J. RosenQiong Zhou

Journal:   Langmuir Year: 2001 Vol: 17 (12)Pages: 3532-3537
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.