Dilution-Induced Deposition of Concentrated Binary Mixtures of Cationic Polysaccharides and Surfactants.
Laura Fernández-PeñaEduardo GuzmanTeresa Oñate-MartínezCoral Fernández-PérezFrancisco OrtegaRamon G RubioGustavo S LuengoPublished in: Polymers (2023)
This work investigates the effect of dilution on the phase separation process of binary charged polysaccharide-surfactant mixtures formed by two cationic polysaccharides and up to four surfactants of different nature (anionic, zwitterionic, and neutral), as well as the potential impact of dilution-induced phase separation on the formation of conditioning deposits on charged surfaces, mimicking the negative charge and wettability of damaged hair fibers. The results obtained showed that the dilution behavior of model washing formulations (concentrated polysaccharide-surfactant mixtures) cannot be described in terms of a classical complex precipitation framework, as phase separation phenomena occur even when the aggregates are far from the equilibrium phase separation composition. Therefore, dilution-enhanced deposition cannot be predicted in terms of the worsening of colloidal stability due to the charge neutralization phenomena, as common phase separation and, hence, enhanced deposition occurs even for highly charged complexes.
Keyphrases
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- ionic liquid
- gas chromatography
- liquid chromatography
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- mass spectrometry
- water soluble
- simultaneous determination
- tandem mass spectrometry
- drug induced
- molecular dynamics
- oxidative stress
- escherichia coli
- high resolution
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- biofilm formation