Experimental exchange" lelramethylammonium 339.54 92 DS telrae~ylammonlum 395.65 99 dimethyldiethanolammonium 399.60 90 telrabutylammonium 507.86 96Synthesis of surfactants with diverse organic counterions: Cetyltrimethylammonium chloride (Aldrich) and sodium dodecylsulfate (Serva) were used as supplied. The sodium salts of propionic acid, hydroxybutyric acid, oxalic acid, fumaric acid, maleic acid, terephthalic acid, tartaric acid, and citric acid (all Aldrich) were made by neutralization of a 5 wt.-% acid solution in water with sodium hydroxide. The aqueous solutions of the salts were used as stock solutions. Tetramethylammonium chloride, tetraethylammonium chloride hydrate, and tetrabutylammonium chloride hydrate (Aldrich) were also used as supplied. Diethanoldimethylammonium chloride was synthesized by quarternation of dimethylethanolamine.The surfactants with organic counterions were made by extraction processes. Because the solid-liquid extraction turned out to be rather ineffective for removal of the inorganic salt from the double organic salts, a liquidliquid extraction procedure was performed. For this procedure, stoichiometric amounts of the appropriate organic salts including the targeted counterion were dissolved in a 25 wt-% aqueous solution of the surfactants SDS or CTMA-CI, and 2-butanol was added step-wise until phase separation occurrcd. After separation of the phases, the lower aqueous phase was removed. Repeated addition of small amounts of 2-butanol to the organic phase caused repeated phase separation, until the remainder contained little double inorganic salt, and precipitation stopped. The double organic surfactant was isolated by evaporation of the solvent under reduced pressure. This purification procedure was repeated until the residual amounts of inorganic salt were insignificant. Depending on the hydrophilicity of the organic counterions, ion exchange ratios between 81 % and 99 YO were obtained, as determined by 'H-measurements. Since purity turned out not to be critical for the resulting particle sizes (microemulsions made with the same surfactant with 80-95% purity produced the same particle size, higher salt loads increased the particle size). exhaustive purification was not performed. This contrasts strongly from the influence of salts on standard microemulsions where a decreased particle size with increasing amounts of salt is found [23]. Table 3 summarizes the systems used for the present examination including their ion exchange grade. CTMA-propanoate CTMA.-oxalale CTMA,-terephthalale CTMA-yhydroxvbuwrate CTMAdarfrate CTMA,-maleate CTMA,-fumarate