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Differential behavior of sodium laurylsulfate micelles in the presence of nonionic polymers

by Chandra A Ade-browne, Arnab Dawn, Marzieh S Mirzamani, Harshita Kumari, Shuo Qian
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science
Publication Date
Page Numbers
276 to 283
Volume
544

Hypothesis: Theory and practice have proven that the cleansing properties and irritation potential of surfactants can be controlled with the addition of co-surfactants or polymers. The size of the surfactant-polymer nanoassembly, which differs from the pure surfactant micelle, has been postulated to be the cause of the differences in a surfactant system’s ability to disrupt the skin barrier. However, a firm structure–function relationship connecting polymer and surfactant under a consumer relevant condition is yet to be established. It is therefore hypothesized that apart from the size, the shape and the chemical nature of the polymer might play crucial roles.

Experiments: We used combined small-angle neutron scattering, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, tensiometry, and dye solubilization methods to investigate the shape, size, and intermolecular interactions involved in sodium laurylsulfate-based systems in the presence of two industrially important and chemically distinct polymers, polyethylene glycol and polyvinyl alcohol, adopting a consumer relevant protocol.

Findings: Apart from size, shape and inter-micellar interactions fine-tuned by the presence of the polymers are found to be the important factors. Secondly, the physicochemical property of the polymer including chemical structure, conformation, hydrophilicity, presence of side groups, all can have crucial influence on polymer-surfactant interaction, micelle formation, and micelle stability.