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Below the CMC point, interfacial tension between oil and water phase is no longer effectively reduced. [10] If the concentration of the surfactant is kept a little above the CMC, the additional amount covers the dissolution with existing brine in the reservoir. It is desired that the surfactant will work at the lowest interfacial tension (IFT).
The critical micelle concentration (CMC) is the exact concentration of surfactants at which aggregates become thermodynamically soluble in an aqueous solution. Below the CMC there is not a high enough density of surfactant to spontaneously precipitate into a distinct phase. [7]
In a micellar solution, some amphiphiles are clumped together and some are dispersed. Micellar solutions form when the concentration of amphiphile exceeds the critical micelle concentration (CMC) or critical aggregation concentration (CAC), which is when there are enough amphiphiles in the solution to clump together to form micells.
CM is the concentration of the micelle in the mobile phase (total surfactant concentration - critical micelle concentration) A plot of 1/k¢ verses CM gives a straight line in which KSW can be calculated from the intercept and KMW can be obtained from the ratio of the slope to the intercept. Finally, KSM can be obtained from the ratio of the ...
The molecules will be forced to remain in the aqueous phase when there are no more vacancies for them to stay on the surface. At this point, the surface tension is maximally lowered and is termed as the critical micelle concentration (CMC). [21] The lower the CMC, the more efficient the wetting solution is in reducing surface tension.
For most lyotropic systems aggregation occurs only when the concentration of the amphiphile exceeds a critical concentration (known variously as the critical micelle concentration (CMC) or the critical aggregation concentration (CAC)). At very low amphiphile concentration, the molecules will be dispersed randomly without any ordering.
Lead exposure in the 20th century may have led to mental health issues in Americans, a new study suggests. Researchers from Duke University and Florida State University studied the impact of lead ...
Micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) is a chromatography technique used in analytical chemistry. It is a modification of capillary electrophoresis (CE), extending its functionality to neutral analytes, [ 1 ] where the samples are separated by differential partitioning between micelles (pseudo-stationary phase) and a surrounding aqueous ...