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Properties of Surfactants: Wetting

By: Anthony J. O'Lenick, Jr., Siltech LLC
Posted: July 25, 2005, from the July 2005 issue of Cosmetics & Toiletries.

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6 pages available as a PDF download or printed copies mailed to you

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This is the second in a series of four articles that will deal with different topics in the field of surfactants. Surfactants are a major class of materials that provide the functional basis of most personal care products. The term “surfactant” is a word that was coined by contracting two words: surface-active agent.

Surfactants, as surface active agents, are compounds that are active at interfacial surfaces. Surfactants function in a variety of ways, depending upon their chemical structure, but all the surfactant functionalities are driven by the systems in which the surfactant is placed and the need to get to the lowest free energy in the system.

These articles will deal with surfactants from a functional point of view. The function a surfactant brings to a formulation is in fact the reason one chooses the particular surfactant. The articles will address the properties surfactants provide namely: conditioning,1 wetting, detergency, and emulsification.

 

This is only an excerpt of the full article that appeared in Cosmetics & Toiletries, but you can purchase the full-text version.