Surfactant Micelles Dr. Aws Alshamsan Department of Pharmaceutics Office: AA87 Tel: 4677363

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Effect of Solute on Solubilization Ability and Micellar Structure of Dodecylbenzenesulfonate Experimental and Molecular Dynamics Study Huang-chin Hung,
Advertisements

Biochemistry 4511 Chapter 2 Water Chapter 2 Water revised 8/26/2013.
Polyelectrolyte solutions
Ions in aqueous Solutions And Colligative Properties
An overview Colloids An overview
Applications of Gauss’s Law
Cell Membrane Controls what materials enter or leave the cell Also called the phospholipid bilayer Heads are hydrophilic(“water loving”) They attract.
Solutions and Water Structure. Properties of solutions Water microstructure Solute microstructure –Ionic solutes –Polar solutes –Nonpolar solutes (the.
Lecture 16: Self Assembly of Amphiphiles. What did we cover in the last lecture? Aggregates will form when the free energy per molecule/particle inside.
Properties of Water. Water The universal solvent in living things which makes up over 90% of cells and the majority of Earth.
Interfacial Phenomena. Interface:  boundary between 2 immiscible phases. NB: it is not present between miscible liquids  properties of molecules at.
Membrane Transport.
Combined with Explains almost all Solution behaviors Fourth example of Colligative Properties: Osmosis – the movement of solvent through a semi- permeable.
Solutions Chapter 14. Key concepts 1.Understand the solvation process at the molecular level. 2.Be able to qualitatively describe energy changes during.
SURFACTANTS IN SOLUTION. Amphiphilic Surfactants Amphiphilic surfactants contain a non-polar portion and a polar portion. Aerosol OT.
Surface and Interface Chemistry  Thermodynamics of Surfaces (LG and LL Interfaces) Valentim M. B. Nunes Engineering Unit of IPT 2014.
Lecture 17: Lipid Vesicles and Membranes. What did we cover in the last lecture? Amphiphilic molecules contain a hydrophobic head group and hydrophobic.
Chapter 15. Surfactants.
The Origins of Surface and Interfacial Tension
Exam info Date & time: 21/ M-house Form:- questions - what, how, why, - easy calculations - order of magnitude estimation - know central equations.
Dispersed Systems FDSC Version. Goals Scales and Types of Structure in Food Surface Tension Curved Surfaces Surface Active Materials Charged Surfaces.
Chemistry Lecture Text Chapter 2. Chemistry in Physiology Physiology requires some familiarity with basic chemistry –atomic and molecular structure –chemical.
Intermolecular Forces Chapter 11 Intermolecular Forces, Liquids, and Solids John D. Bookstaver St. Charles Community College St. Peters, MO  2006, Prentice.
Intermolecular Forces © 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Evaporation, Vapor Pressure, and Intermolecular Forces John D. Bookstaver St. Charles Community College.
Intermolecular Forces Chapter 11 Intermolecular Forces, Liquids, and Solids.
Solutions and Suspensions
By Pietro Cicuta Statistical mechanics and soft condensed matter Micelle geometry.
Kamila Mikołajczuk Magdalena Mieścicka
Surface Chemistry the study of physical and chemical phenomena that occur at the interface of two phases, including solid-liquid interfaces, solid-gas.
Applications of Polymerized Vesicles Seung-Woo Son, Complex System and Statistical Physics Lab.
MICELLES Thermodynamically Stable Colloids (Chapter 4, pp in Shaw) In dilute solutions surfactants act as normal solutes. At well defined concentrations,
Micelle A micelle (rarely micella, plural micellae) is an aggregate of surfactant molecules dispersed in a liquid colloid. A typical micelle in aqueous.
Thermodynamic Principles of Self-assembly 계면화학 8 조 최민기, Liu Di ’ nan, 최신혜 Chapter 16.
Colloidal Dispersion Dr. Aws Alshamsan Department of Pharmaceutics Office: AA87 Tel:
Thermotropic LC’s – A Reminder. Lyotropic Liquid Crystals Molecules usually amphiphilic – hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts. How will these behave around.
§8.5 Surfactants and their properties and Applications.
Detergents – amphipathic/amphiphillic molecules that have a limited solubility and above a critical concentration form micelles (CMC). micellemonomer When.
What is a Colloid? Intermediate between a true solution and a suspension High molecular weight Aggregate into large particles, ~micron Finely divided (“isolated”)
 Triatomic molecule  Contains covalent bonds  Includes partial positive and partial negative charges  Where do these charges come from?
Polymeric Micelles Dr. Aws Alshamsan Department of Pharmaceutics Office: AA87 Tel:
Water Emergent Properties of Water – Water is perhaps the most important Molecule found on the surface of the Earth. It makes up roughly 75% of Earth's.
Self-assembly of surfactant 황인찬. Contents 1. Surfactant and Micelle 2. The Reason for Studying Micelle 3. Simulation Method 4. Definition of Model.
Introduction to Dispersed Systems FDSC400 09/28/2001.
After completing this topic you should be able to : Describe effect of dilution on the pH of an acid or alkali is explained in terms of the decreasing.
CHEMISTRY 2000 Topic #2: Intermolecular Forces – What Attracts Molecules to Each Other? Spring 2010 Dr. Susan Lait.
Adsorption of geses on liquids. Surface-active and surface-inactive substances. Gibbs’s equation, Shyshkovsky’s equations and Langmuir’s equations Plan.
CELL TRANSPORT Courtesy of:
Kh Sadique Faisal Asst. Lecturer Northern University Bangladesh.
Ultrafiltration of Arsenic Using Regenerated Cellulose Membranes By Kyle Heckel April 19 th, 2008.
LECTURE 8: Physical-chemical essence of surface phenomenon. ass. prof. Yeugenia B. Dmukhalska.
Emulsions Continued.
Water and Solutions Section 2-2. Water is a Major Component of Cells 70 % of your body is water. 2/3 of molecules in body are water. 70 % of your body.
Cell Membrane bubble lab
8.2 Solutions and Their Characteristics 8.3 The Dissolving Process
Water and the solution process
Polarity and Hydrogen Bonding Post-Lab
Intermolecular Forces, Liquids, and Solids
ENE/EIE 325 Electromagnetic Fields and Waves
P .K CHOURASIA PRESENTS SURFACE CHEMISTRY.
Experiment (10):Determination of Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC) Theory Surfactants, sometimes called Surface active substances (SAS) are amphiphilic.
Surface Chemistry the study of physical and chemical phenomena that occur at the interface of two phases, including solid-liquid interfaces, solid-gas.
Dynamic Tension Reduction for Adsorption from a Micellar Solution
Chapter 11 Liquids and Intermolecular Forces
Water and the Fitness of the Environment
The Direct Adsorption of Micelles to a Clean Air/Water Interface
Intermolecular Forces
Physical pharmacy Experiment NO. 3 Surface Active Agents
Hemin J Majeed MSc. Pharmaceutical sciences
Introduction to Biophysics Lecture 17 Self assembly
Counterion Condensation and Collapse of Polyelectrolyte Chains
Presentation transcript:

Surfactant Micelles Dr. Aws Alshamsan Department of Pharmaceutics Office: AA87 Tel:

Association colloids Refers to colloids that are formed by self- assembling small molecules enough to produce aggregates in the colloidal size range Surfactant micelles Microemulstions Liposomes Polymeric micelles

Surfactants Water attracts the polar head and repels the hydrocarbon tail

Surfactant Surfactants tend to adsorb at: air/water interface oil/water interface solid/water interface

Surface tension Surface tension decreases as the surfactant concentration increases up to the critical micelle concentration (CMC)

Surfactant micelles Above CMC, excess surfactant molecules will associate into small aggregates called micelles

Changes occurring after the CMC PropertyEffect Surface tensionDecrease Interfacial tensionDecrease Equivalent conductivityDecrease Osmotic pressureIncrease Drug solubilityIncrease

Surfactant micelle The concentration of the micellar surfactant equals to the total surfactant concentration minus the CMC Diluting the solution below the CMC causes the micelles to break up into single or non- associate surfactant monomers

Micellar dynamics Micelles are not static: they dissociate, regroup, and re- associate rapidly (fraction of second) Surfactant molecules (free, adsorbed, and micellar) are in dynamic equilibrium Micelle Head Tail

Micellar shapes Reverse Micelle SphericalCylindricalLamellar

Spherical micelles The polar heads orient toward the outer shell, while hydrocarbon tails form a spherical core

Cylindrical micelles Larger micelles are more asymmetric where spherical shape converts to cylindrical shape Cylinders tend to arrange in parallel hexagonal contour

Lamellar micelles Surfactant molecules arrange in parallel bimolecular sheets with a tail-to-tail orientation Water is stratified between the sheets

Reverse Cylindrical Micelle Cylindrical Micelle Lamellar Micelle

How to reduce the CMC? Propose two methods to reduce the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of ionic surfactants.