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Rahmat Sadeghi

Rahmat Sadeghi

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 9037288700
Faculty: Faculty of Science
Address: Department of Chemistry, University of Kurdistan, Sanandaj, Iran
Phone:

Research

Title
Soluting-out effect of carbohydrates on the surface active ionic liquid 1-decyl-3-methylimidazolium bromide in aqueous solutions
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Surface tension; Conductivity; Volumetric; Compressibility; Carbohydrate; Ionic liquid
Year
2018
Journal JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THERMODYNAMICS
DOI
Researchers Ziba Zamani ، Omid Naderi ، Rahmat Sadeghi

Abstract

Herein, with the aim of shedding light on the effect of non-ionic co-solute (carbohydrate) stereochemistry on the aggregation and surface behaviour of ionic liquid-based surfactant 1-decyl-3-methylimidazolium bromide ([C10mim][Br]) in aqueous solution, we studied the surface tension, electrical conductivity, volumetric and compressibility properties for the aqueous solutions of [C10mim][Br] in the presence of different sugars containing pentose monosaccharides (xylose, ribose and arabinose), hexose monosaccharides (glucose, and mannose), disaccharides (sucrose and lactose) and trisaccharide (raffinose) at different temperatures. From the electrical conductivity measurements, the values of the degree of ionization of the counter ion on the micelles (α) and thermodynamic properties of micellization (ΔGm) for [C10mim][Br] in aqueous carbohydrate solutions were obtained. The various parameters such as apparent molar volume (Vϕ), isentropic compressibility (κs), apparent molar isentropic compressibility (Kϕ) and the change of apparent molar properties upon micellization (ΔVϕ,m and ΔKϕ,m) were derived from the experimental density and speed of sound data. The surface tension measurements provided a series of parameters, including surface tension at the cmc (γcmc), effectiveness of surface tension reduction (Πcmc), maximum surface excess concentration (Γmax) and minimum surface area per molecule (Amin) at interface of air/solution for the investigated surfactant in the presence of different sugars at 298.15 K. All the investigated carbohydrates have soluting-out effect (favouring the micelle formation) and their abilities to reduce the cmc of [C10mim][Br] in aqueous solutions increase with an increase in the hydrophilicity of the carbohydrate.