Tensoactivos - CMC y Formación de Micelas

Visualización interactiva del comportamiento de tensoactivos - CMC, valor HLB, adsorción de Gibbs, formación de micelas y aplicaciones

Modo de Visualización

Concentración: 0 mM Tensión Superficial: 72.8 mN/m

Estadísticas en Tiempo Real

CMC 8.2 mM
Valor HLB 12.5
Número de Agregación 62
Radio de Micela 2.5 nm
Presión Superficial 0.0 mN/m
Cantidad de Adsorción (Γ) 0.00 μmol/m²
HLB = 20 × Mh/(Mh + Ml)
Γ = -(1/RT)(dγ/d ln c)

Parámetros

Cadenas más largas → CMC más bajo
Afecta la CMC y el tamaño de micelas
Más sal → CMC más bajo (para iónicos)
Afecta la ionización de tensoactivos iónicos
Comparar con valor CMC

Tensoactivos Predefinidos

Aplicaciones de Tensoactivos

🧼

Detergentes y Limpieza

Eliminación de suciedad y aceites mediante emulsificación y solubilización micelar

💊

Farmacéutica

Sistemas de administración de fármacos, solubilización de fármacos hidrofóbicos

🍽️

Industria Alimentaria

Emulsionantes, estabilizantes, modificadores de textura en alimentos procesados

🎨

Cosméticos

Emulsiones, agentes espumantes, agentes humectantes en cuidado personal

🛢️

Recuperación de Petróleo

Recuperación mejorada de petróleo mediante reducción de la tensión interfacial

🔬

Investigación y Biotecnología

Solubilización de proteínas, extracción de proteínas de membrana, portadores de fármacos

What are Surfactants?

Surfactants (surface-active agents) are amphiphilic molecules containing both hydrophilic (water-loving) and lipophilic (oil-loving) parts. This dual nature allows them to adsorb at interfaces, reducing surface tension and forming micelles above the critical micelle concentration (CMC). The hydrophilic head can be ionic (anionic like SDS, cationic like CTAB) or nonionic (polyethylene glycol chains like Tween). The hydrophobic tail is typically a hydrocarbon chain (8-18 carbons). Surfactants are essential in detergents, emulsifiers, wetting agents, foaming agents, and dispersants.

Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC)

The CMC is the concentration above which surfactant molecules spontaneously aggregate into micelles. Below CMC, surfactants exist as monomers adsorbed at interfaces. At CMC, the interface becomes saturated and additional molecules form micelles in the bulk solution. CMC depends on surfactant structure: longer hydrocarbon chains lower CMC (log CMC ∝ -chain length), ionic surfactants have higher CMC than nonionics, added salt lowers CMC for ionic surfactants by screening electrostatic repulsion. Typical CMC values: SDS ~8 mM, CTAB ~1 mM, Tween 80 ~0.012 mM. The visualization shows the surface tension vs concentration curve with a clear break at CMC.

HLB Value (Hydrophilic-Lipophilic Balance)

The HLB value quantifies the balance between hydrophilic and lipophilic parts of a surfactant molecule, calculated as HLB = 20 × Mh/(Mh + Ml), where Mh is the molecular weight of the hydrophilic portion and Ml is the lipophilic portion. HLB scale ranges from 0-20: HLB 0-6 (lipophilic, W/O emulsifiers), HLB 7-9 (wetting agents), HLB 8-18 (hydrophilic, O/W emulsifiers), HLB 13-15 (detergents), HLB 10-18 (solubilizers). This allows prediction of surfactant behavior: low HLB prefers oil phase, high HLB prefers water phase. The visualization calculates HLB based on molecular structure and suggests appropriate applications.

Gibbs Adsorption Isotherm

The Gibbs adsorption equation relates surface excess concentration (Γ) to surface tension reduction: Γ = -(1/RT)(dγ/d ln c), where γ is surface tension, c is bulk concentration, R is the gas constant, and T is temperature. This equation quantifies how much surfactant accumulates at the interface. For ionic surfactants, the prefactor becomes 1/(nRT) where n depends on dissociation. The slope of the γ vs ln(c) plot gives adsorption: negative slope (surface tension decreases with concentration) indicates positive adsorption. The visualization demonstrates this relationship and calculates Γ from the surface tension curve.

Micelle Formation and Structure

Above CMC, surfactants form micelles - aggregates with hydrophobic tails shielded from water inside and hydrophilic heads facing the aqueous phase. Micelle shape depends on the packing parameter p = v/(a₀lc), where v is tail volume, a₀ is head area, and lc is tail length: p ≤ 1/3 (spherical), 1/3 < p ≤ 1/2 (cylindrical), 1/2 < p ≤ 1 (lamellar), p > 1 (inverted structures). Aggregation number (n = 50-100 for spherical micelles) increases with chain length and decreases with temperature. Micelles can solubilize hydrophobic compounds in their core, making them useful for drug delivery and oil removal. The visualization shows micelle formation at different concentrations and the transition between shapes.

Emulsion Types and Stability

Emulsions are dispersions of immiscible liquids: oil-in-water (O/W) with oil droplets in water, or water-in-oil (W/O) with water droplets in oil. Surfactant HLB determines emulsion type: low HLB (3-6) stabilizes W/O, high HLB (8-18) stabilizes O/W. Emulsion stability depends on interfacial tension reduction, droplet size, and surfactant film strength. Multiple emulsions like W/O/W and O/W/O are possible. The Phase Diagram mode shows how oil-water-surfactant mixtures form different phases: micellar solution, lamellar phase, reverse micelles, microemulsions. Applications include food (mayonnaise, milk), cosmetics (creams, lotions), and pharmaceuticals.

Solubilization Applications

Solubilization is the incorporation of insoluble substances into micelles, dramatically increasing their apparent solubility. The solubilizate resides in different micelle regions depending on polarity: nonpolar compounds in the hydrocarbon core, polar compounds near the head groups, ionic compounds at the micelle surface. Solubilization capacity increases with surfactant concentration above CMC and with micelle size. This phenomenon is crucial for: drug delivery (hydrophobic drugs in polymeric micelles), oil spill remediation, detergent action (oils solubilized in micelles), and membrane protein extraction. The visualization shows solubilization process and capacity as a function of surfactant concentration.

Factors Affecting Surfactant Behavior

Molecular structure: Chain length (longer → lower CMC, higher aggregation), head group size (larger → higher CMC), unsaturation (lowers CMC). Environmental conditions: Temperature (affects CMC differently for ionic vs nonionic), pH (affects ionic surfactants and head group ionization), salt concentration (screens repulsion, lowers CMC for ionic), added organic solvents (can increase or decrease CMC). Mixtures: Mixed micelles form from surfactant mixtures with properties between the components. Presence of oils: Can swell micelles or induce phase transitions. The visualization allows exploration of these effects to understand surfactant behavior in different formulations and conditions.