Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog
RECORD NUMBER: 1 OF 1Main Title | Surfactant science and technology : retrospects and prospects / | ||||
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Type | EBOOK | ||||
Other Authors |
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Publisher | CRC Press, | ||||
Year Published | 2014 | ||||
Call Number | QD506.S847 2014 | ||||
ISBN | 9781439882962 (e-book : PDF); 9781439882955 (hardback) | ||||
Subjects | Surfact chemistry ; Surface active agents ; Colloids | ||||
Internet Access |
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Collation | 1 online resource : text file, PDF | ||||
Notes | "A festschrift in honor of Dr. Kash Mittal." Includes bibliographical references and index. Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only |
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Contents Notes | part 1. Theory of self-assembly and ion-specific effects -- part 2. Surfactants at solid-liquid interfaces -- part 3. Polymeric surfactants and polymer/surfactant mixtures -- part 4. Biosurfactants -- part 5. Formulation and application of surfactant aggregates -- part 6. Formulation and application of emulsions. "A celebration was held at the 18th Surfactants in Solution (SIS) meeting in November 2010 in Melbourne in honor of Kashmiri Mittal's 100th edited book. Those who participated in the symposium are leaders in the fields of surfactant-based, physical, organic, and materials chemistries, and many agreed to contribute a chapter to this book. Some chapters are contributed by others who wanted to participate in the meeting but were unable to attend. The authors were asked to give an overview of their research area and to include sections on past, present, and future directions. The authors updated and revised their manuscripts as needed in 2012. The cumulative result is a broad perspective on the current developments in and future of surfactant science and technology. The next SIS will be held in Coimbra, Portugal, in June 2014, the 20th biennial meeting over about two score years. During this time, the field of surfactant chemistry has expanded dramatically and has evolved considerably, aided by the development of modern instrumentation and new experimental techniques that permit exploration of surfactant properties in both the bulk and at molecular levels and by simulation. The physical properties of surface-active agents, commonly known as surfactants, amphiphiles, detergents, or soaps, are governed by covalently bonding two opposite chemical properties in one molecule: a water-insoluble hydrophobic tail, typically composed of linear hydrocarbon chemically bonded to polar or ionic headgroup and counterion. These surfactant monomers or unimers self-assemble into a plethora of aggregate structures such as micelles, microemulsions, vesicles, and emulsions depending on solution composition, but they also form surfactant monolayers at the air, liquid, and solid interface"-- |