Electrophoresis, Vol.25, No.4-5, 622-634, 2004
Polymeric sulfated surfactants with varied hydrocarbon tail: I. Synthesis, characterization, and application in micellar electrokinetic chromatography
The influence of surfactant hydrocarbon tail on the solute/pseudostationary phase interactions was examined. Four anionic sulfated surfactants with 8-, 9-, 10-, and 11 carbon chains having a polymerizable double bond at the end of the hydrocarbon chain were synthesized and characterized before and after polymerization. The critical micelle concentration (CIVIC), polarity, and aggregation number of the four sodium alkenyl sulfate (SAIS) surfactants were determined using fluorescence spectroscopy. The partial specific volume of the polymeric SAIS (poly-SAIS) surfactants was estimated by density measurements and capillary electrophoresis (CE) was employed for determination of methylene selectivity as well as for elution window. The CIVIC of the monomers of SAIS surfactants decrease with increase in chain length and correlated well when fluorescence method was compared to CE. The physicochemical properties (partial specific volume, methylene selectivity, electrophoretic mobility, and elution window) increased with an increase in chain length. However, no direct relationship was found between the aggregation number and the length of hydrophobic tail of poly-SAIS surfactants. These polymeric surfactants were then used as pseudostationary phases in micellar electrokinetic chromatography (MEKC) to study the retention behavior and selectivity factor of 36 benzene derivatives with different chemical characteristics. Although variation in chain length of the polymeric surfactants significantly affects the retention of nonhydrogen bonding (NHB) benzene derivatives, these effects were less pronounced for hydrogen bond acceptor (HBA) and hydrogen bond donor (HBD) benzene derivatives. Therefore, hydrophobicity of poly-SAIS surfactants was found to be a major driving force for retention of NHB derivatives. However, for several benzene derivatives (NHB, HBA, and HBD) significantly higher selectivity factor was observed with longest chain polymeric surfactant (e.g., poly(sodium 10-undecenyl sulfate), poly-SUS) compared to shorter chain polymeric surfactant (e.g., poly(sodium 7-octenyl sulfate), poly-SOcS). In addition, the effect of the surfactant hydrophobic chain was also found to have some impact on migration order of NHB, HBA, and HBD benzene derivatives.
Keywords:hydrocarbon chain length;hydrogen bond acceptor benzene derivatives;hydrogen bond donor benzene derivatives;micellar electrokinetic chromatography nonhydrogen bonding benzene derivatives;polymeric surfactants