The kinetics of alcohol oxidation catalyzed by the enzyme horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (HLADH) is
studied in water/alcohol/C12E23 systems with a series of n-alcohols ranging from ethanol to 1-decanol or with
α,ω-alkandiols, namely, 1,5-pentanediol and 1,7-heptanediol. Essentially, the water-rich part of the ternary
systems is examined, either without C12E23 or at several constant C12E23 concentrations above the cmc (1, 8,
and 22 mass %). The substrate inhibition of the enzyme allows one to infer alcohol partition coefficients
between the outer aqueous pseudophase and the surfactant aggregation pseudophase. In the case of short-chain n-alcohol (ethanol, 1-propanol) and alkandiol (1,5-pentanediol) systems, the alcohol seems to remain
in the aqueous pseudophase, whereas in the case of middle- and long-chain n-alcohol (1-butanol to 1-decanol)
and alkandiol (1,7-heptandiol) systems, the alcohol participates in the structuration of the micelle.
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