Lecture 2 Surface Active Agents
Lecture 2 Surface Active Agents
(SAA)
Objectives
By the end of this lecture, the student
will be able to:
1. Illustrate the structure of SAA
2. Classify SAA and enumerate their
uses and predict factors affecting
Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC)
3. Define adsorption and predict factors
affecting it 2
Surface Active Agents (SAA)
4
• Depending on the number and nature of the polar
and nonpolar groups present, the amphiphile may
be hydrophilic, lipophilic or be reasonably
well-balanced between these two extremes.
• It is the amphiphilic nature of surface active
agents which causes them to be adsorbed at
interfaces, whether these be liquid/gas or
liquid/liquid.
5
• A scale showing classification of surfactant
function on the basis of HLB values of
surfactants.
• The higher the HLB of a surfactant the more
hydrophilic it is.
• Example: Spans with low HLB are lipophilic.
Tweens with high HLB are hydrophilic.
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7
Determination of HLB
HLB =E + P / 5
12
• According to the wettability, the drop will make a
certain angle of contact with the solid.
• A contact angle is lower than 90°, the solid is
called wettable
• A contact angle is wider than 90°, the solid is
named non-wettable.
• A contact angle equal to zero indicates
complete wettability.
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complete no
incomplete wetting
wetting wetting
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At water-air interface
• Surface active molecules will be adsorbed at
water-air interfaces and oriented so that the
hydrocarbon chains of are pushed out of the
water and rest on the surface, while the polar
groups are inside the water.
At oil-water interface
• The hydrophobic portion is inside the oil phase
and the hydrophilic portion inside the water
phase.
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At low surfactant concentrations:
At higher concentrations:
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Micelle Formation
21
22
Micelle shape
Normal spherical micelles
Inverted spherical micelles
Cylindrical and lamellar micelles
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Factors affecting CMC
For nonionic surfactants
Temperature CMC
For ionic surfactants
The CMC are higher for ionic than nonionic
surfactants
Effect of electrolytes on the CMC of ionic
surfactants
The addition of salts to ionic surfactant
solutions reduces the electric repulsion between
the charged groups and lower CMC values
24
Electrolyte has small
or no effect on the
CMC of non-ionic
surfactants. 25
Effect of Surfactant’s
structure on CMC
• In polar solvents:
• Polarity of Surfactant molecules CMC
• Length of hydrocarbon chain CMC
• In non-polar solvents:
• Polarity of Surfactant molecules CMC
• Length of hydrocarbon chain CMC
26
Type of counter-ion
• Micellar size increases for a particular cationic
surfactant as the counter ion is changed
according to the series Cl- < Br- < I-, and for a
particular anionic surfactant according to Na+ <
K+.
• Ionic surfactants with organic counter ions (e.g.
maleates) have lower CMCs and higher
aggregation numbers than those with inorganic
counter ions.
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28
Micellar Solubilization
• Micelles form around the molecules of the water
insoluble compound inside the micelles’ cores
and bring them into solution in an aqueous
medium. This phenomenon is called micellar
solubilization.
• The inverted micelles formed by oil soluble
surfactant can solubilize water-soluble compound
which is located in the center of the micelle, out
of contact with the solvent. 29
• Micelles of nonionic surfactants consist of an
outer shell containing their polyethylene glycol
moieties mixed with water and an inner core
formed by their hydrocarbon moieties.
• Micellar solubilization does not take place
below the CMC.
• So dissolution begins at the CMC.
• Above the CMC, the amount solubilized is
directly proportional to the surfactant
concentration.
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• Compounds that are extensively solubilized
increase the size of micelles in two ways:
The micelles swell because their core volume
is augmented by the volume of the solubilizate.
The number of surfactant molecules per
micelle increases.
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Detergents
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Structural Classification
Surfactant may be classified into:
Ionic surfactants
Anionic surfactants: the surface active part is anion
(negative) e.g. sodium lauryl sulfate
Cationic surfactants: the surface active part is cation
(positive) e.g. Quaternary ammonium salts
Ampholytic surfactants: contain both positive and
negative ions e.g. dodecyl-B-alanine.
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Non-ionic surfactants
Widely used in pharmaceutical formulations e.g. Tweens
and Spans.
They are polyethylene oxide products.
Surfactants based on sorbitan are of pharmaceutical
importance.
34
Esterification of the primary hydroxyl group with
lauric, palmitic, stearic or oleic acid forms
sorbitan monolaurate, monopalmitate,
monostearate or monooleate
These are water-insoluble surfactants called Span
20, 40, 60 or 80, respectively.
Addition of about 20 ethylene oxide molecules
produces the water-soluble surfactants called
polysorbate or Tween 20, 40. 60 or 80. 35
Sorbitan
Polyoxyethylene sorbitan
monostearate (tween 60)
36
Adsorption at solid liquid interface
It is a surface phenomenon
Adsorption is the adhesion of atoms, ions, of gas,
liquid, or solids to a surface
This process creates a film of the adsorbate (the
molecules or atoms being accumulated) on the
surface of the adsorbent.
Adsorbate: the material being adsorbed.
Adsorbent: the solid material being used as the
adsorbing phase (e.g., activated carbon). 37
It is different from absorption, in which a
substance diffuses into a liquid or solid
The term sorption contains both processes, while
desorption is the reverse of adsorption.
38
There are two general types of adsorption:
1. Physical adsorption, in which the adsorbate is
bound to the surface through the weak van der
Waals forces.
2. Chemical adsorption or chemisorption, which
involves the stronger forces.
Adsorption data may be analysed using the
Langmuir and Freundlich equations
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The Langmuir equation is:
c/(x/m) = 1/ab + c/a
Where:
x is the amount of solute adsorbed by a weight, m, of
adsorbent, c is the concentration of solution at
equilibrium, b is a constant related to the enthalpy of
adsorption and a is related to the surface area of the solid.
40
The Langmuir is based on four assumptions:
1. The surface of the adsorbent is uniform, that is,
all the adsorption sites are equivalent.
2. Adsorbed molecules do not interact.
3. All adsorption occurs through the same
mechanism.
4. At the maximum adsorption, only a monolayer is
formed
Many deviations from the Langmuir equation can
occur especially at high concentration
41
The Freundlich equation is:
log (x/m) = log a + (1/n) log c
Where
1/n is a dimensionless parameter and is related to the
intensity of drug adsorption.
Systems that obey this equation, adsorption results in the
formation of multilayers rather than a single monolayer.
42
Common Adsorbents
Activated carbon also called activated charcoal: it
is extremely porous and thus have a very large
surface area available for adsorption
Silica gel - hard, granular, porous material
Activated alumina - aluminum oxide
43
Factors affecting adsorption
1. Solubility of the adsorbate.
In general, the extent of adsorption of a solute is
inversely proportional to its solubility in the
solvent from which adsorption occurs.
Adsorption from solution increases as the
molecules become more hydrophobic
44
2. pH
In general, for simple molecules adsorption
increases as the ionization of the drug is
suppressed, the extent of adsorption reaching a
maximum when the drug is completely unionized
With amphoteric substances: at isoelectric
point→↓ ionization and solubility→↑ adsorption
Adsorption of non electrolytes is not
greatly affected by the pH value of the
solution
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3. Nature of the adsorbent
The extent of adsorption is proportional to the
specific surface area (the more finely divided or
the more porous the solid → ↑ adsorption.
Size of the molecule with respect to size of the
pores (large molecules may be too large to enter
small pores and this may reduce adsorption)
4. Temperature
Since adsorption is generally an exothermic
process, an increase in temperature normally
leads to a decrease in the amount adsorbed.
5. Contact time or residence time
The longer the time the more complete the
adsorption will be
6. Affinity of the solute for the adsorbent
The surface of activated carbon is only slightly
polar. Hence non-polar substances will be more
easily picked up by the carbon than polar ones.
↑ number of carbon atoms → lower polarity → ↑
adsorption (e.g., the degree of adsorption
increases in the sequence formic-acetic
47
Pharmaceutical applications of adsorption
1. Adsorption of poisons/toxins (gas masks)
2. Taste masking
3. Haemoperfusion
4. Adsorption in drug formulation
5. Purification of water
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Adsorption may cause problems in formulation:
Drugs or other materials such as preservatives are
adsorbed by containers, thereby reducing the effective
concentration.
Certain additives, such as the parabens, may be adsorbed
on to the solid material present in a suspension, leading to
a loss in antimicrobial activity.
The adsorption of insulin on to intravenous administration
sets has been reported,
The sorption of phenylmercuric acetate, used as a
preservative in eye drops, on to polyethylene containers