Interactions between Ionic Cellulose Derivatives Recycled from Textile Wastes and Surfactants: Interfacial, Aggregation and Wettability Studies.

Molecules

CIQUP, IMS (Institute for Molecular Sciences), Departamento de Química e Bioquímica, Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade do Porto, Rua do Campo Alegre s/n, 4169-007 Porto, Portugal.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Interactions between polymers and surfactants in water can lead to important applications in detergents and fabric softeners.
  • Researchers synthesized sodium carboxymethylcellulose and quaternized cellulose from textile waste and studied their interactions with different types of surfactants commonly used in the textile industry.
  • The study found that mixtures with oppositely charged components showed strong associations and improved hydrophilicity on hydrophobic substrates, indicating that these polymer-surfactant mixtures can be more effective than surfactants alone.

Article Abstract

Interactions between polymers (P) and surfactants (S) in aqueous solution lead to interfacial and aggregation phenomena that are not only of great interest in physical chemistry but also important for many industrial applications, such as the development of detergents and fabric softeners. Here, we synthesized two ionic derivatives-sodium carboxymethylcellulose (NaCMC) and quaternized cellulose (QC)-from cellulose recycled from textile wastes and then explored the interactions of these polymers with assorted surfactants-cationic (CTAB, gemini), anionic (SDS, SDBS) and nonionic (TX-100)-commonly used in the textile industry. We obtained surface tension curves of the P/S mixtures by fixing the polymer concentration and then increasing the surfactant concentration. In mixtures where polymer and surfactant are oppositely charged (P/S and P/S), a strong association is observed, and from the surface tension curves, we determined the critical aggregation concentration () and critical micelle concentration in the presence of polymer (). For mixtures of similar charge (P/S and P/S), virtually no interactions are observed, with the notable exception of the QC/CTAB system, which is much more surface active than the neat CTAB. We further investigated the effect of oppositely charged P/S mixtures on hydrophilicity by measuring the contact angles of aqueous droplets on a hydrophobic textile substrate. Significantly, both P/S and P/S systems greatly enhance the hydrophilicity of the substrate at much lower surfactant concentrations than the surfactant alone (in particular in the QC/SDBS and QC/SDS systems).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10144465PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28083454DOI Listing

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