2001
DOI: 10.1016/s1383-7303(01)80062-4
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1. Chemistry of surfactants

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Cited by 25 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 112 publications
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“…The lower specificity constant of PFOA (0.85 M -1 min -1 ) compared to PFOS (5.84 M -1 min -1 ) indicates that the cavity-water interface has a lower affinity for PFOA compared to PFOS. This property of PFAS is in agreement with the air-water interface theory of surfactant [36].…”
Section: Estimation Of Active Cavities Concentrationsupporting
confidence: 88%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The lower specificity constant of PFOA (0.85 M -1 min -1 ) compared to PFOS (5.84 M -1 min -1 ) indicates that the cavity-water interface has a lower affinity for PFOA compared to PFOS. This property of PFAS is in agreement with the air-water interface theory of surfactant [36].…”
Section: Estimation Of Active Cavities Concentrationsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…If the concentration of the surfactant is above critical micelle concentration (CMC), the hydrophobic part of surfactant "hides" itself inside the micelle and hydrophilic part is oriented towards the aqueous environment [36]. Thus, the fluorinated hydrophobic tail of PFAS will be first to get exposed to an elevated temperature at the cavity-water interfacial region during cavity collapse.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is evidenced also from the constancy of σ ow in Tables and , at various surfactant concentrations. Such a behavior is typical for the surface/interfacial tension of surfactant solutions above the critical micelle concentration (cmc); see, e.g., ref . It is well-known that the kinetics of surfactant adsorption is very fast above the cmc.…”
Section: Comparison Of Theory and Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Surfactants are chemicals capable of reducing surface tension of liquids or interfaces of liquids, endowed by its hydrophobic tail and hydrophilic head (Rosen 1989 ;Fainerman et al 2001 ;Pletnev et al 2001 ;Salager 2002 ). Based on the charge of the hydrophilic group of surfactants, they are classifi ed as anionic (negatively charged), cationic (positively charged), non-ionic (without any charge) and ampholytic/zwitter ionic (both charges) (Myers and Wiley 1988 ) as shown in Table 5.1 .…”
Section: Chemistry Of Surfactantsmentioning
confidence: 99%