The influence of methyl paraben (MP) and butyl paraben (BP) on the aggregation characteristics of Pluronics in an aqueous medium has been investigated by DLS, SANS, viscometry, and fluorescence measurement techniques. Parabens are extensively used as preservatives in cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and food products. In this paper, we show that their influence on the restructuring and growth of Pluronics micelles vary quite significantly with their aqueous solubility and with the composition of Pluronics. In the case of P105 and P104, MP reduces the sphere-to-rod transition temperature down to room temperature, but BP with significantly less aqueous solubility than MP suppresses such micellar transition and leads to the formation of micellar clusters due to the onset of intermicellar attractive interaction. In the case of more hydrophobic Pluronic P103, on the other hand, both MP and BP are able to induce rapid room temperature sphere-to-rod micellar growth, which is not observed in the presence of water structure making salts like NaCl and Na(3)PO(4). These observations have been attributed to modulation of growth and restructuring processes of the Pluronic micelles arising due to different locations of parabens within the micellar corona as determined by their aqueous solubility and the hydrophobicity of the Pluronics.
The interaction between an anionic surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate) and a nonionic surfactant [polyoxyethylene (9.5) octyl phenyl ether] in aqueous salt solution was investigated using the surface tension method. The critical micelle concentration values were determined for the individual surfactants and their corresponding mixtures. The interaction parameter between the surfactants in the mixed micelles, the activity and activity coefficients in the mixed micelles, and the thermodynamic parameters were calculated using various approaches, viz., Clint, Rubingh, and Maeda models. It was observed that the critical micelle concentration of the mixed surfactants system reveals little deviation from ideality.
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