Fluid Phase Equilibria, Vol.375, 286-292, 2014
A conductance study to analyze the effect of organic solvents on micellization behavior of carbohydrate-surfactant system at variable temperatures
In this paper, micelle formation of a well known anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) in aqueous solutions of four structurally different sugars viz. ribose, glucose, sucrose and raffinose at wide temperature range T = (293.15-318.15) K has been studied. From specific conductance data, the value of CMC and X-CMC have been calculated whose dependence on sugar concentration correlates well with the hydrophobic nature of sugar molecule. A non-linear trend in CMC values is attributed to the presence of both hydrophilic and hydrophobic dehydrations. From X-CMC values, thermodynamic parameters such as standard enthalpy (Delta H-m degrees), standard entropy (Delta S-m degrees), and standard free energy of micellization (Delta G(m)degrees) have also been evaluated. The results of these thermodynamic parameters have been discussed in terms of the structural consequences of the intermolecular interactions. Enthalpy-entropy compensation gave linear dependence, thus suggesting that micellization of SDS is governed by the delicate balance of sugar-water interactions by changing the structural property of water in the presence of sugars. The effect of organic solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), methanol (MeOH) and dioxane has also been discussed in detail. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.