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Nosaibah Ebrahimi

Nosaibah Ebrahimi

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 54644
Faculty: Faculty of Science
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Research

Title
Thermodynamic properties of anionic surfactant/polymer/water systems with respect to polymer-surfactant interactions and salting-effect of surfactant on polymer in aqueous solutions
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Cloud point; Compressibility; Constant water activity line; Isopiestic; Phase diagram; Salt effect; Volumetric
Year
2016
Journal FLUID PHASE EQUILIBRIA
DOI
Researchers Rahmat Sadeghi ، solimani sayvan ، Nosaibah Ebrahimi

Abstract

An extensive set of experimental measurements was carried out on several ternary polymer-surfactant aqueous solutions in order to investigation of the binding behaviors between anionic surfactants and water soluble polymers in aqueous solutions. Isopiestic measurements of different ternary polymer (polyethylene glycol 400 (PEG400), polyethylene glycol 2000 (PEG2000), polyethylene glycol 6000 (PEG6000) and polypropylene glycol 400 (PPG400)) + anionic surfactant (sodium n-hexyl sulfonate) + water systems indicate that, the constant water activity lines of the investigated systems show three regions with convex, concave and convex slopes respectively in low-, intermediate- and high-solutes concentration region. In the second part of this work, volumetric and compressibility properties of micellization of sodium n-hexyl sulfonate in aqueous polymer solutions were studied. Finally, the cloud point measurements of aqueous PPG725 solutions in the absence and presence of various anionic surfactants show that, anionic surfactants with short hydrocarbon chain length decrease the cloud point temperature of PPG725 aqueous solutions (salting-out effect), while anionic surfactants with long hydrocarbon chain length increase that (salting-in effect). Based on the cloud point values, the energetic parameters of the clouding process were estimated and it was found that, entropy is the driving force for biphasic formation. The obtained results were interpreted in term of different interactions existing in aqueous solutions which determine the salting-effects produced by the addition of hydrophilic solutes to aqueous solutions of water soluble polymers. © 2016 Elsevier B.V.