Abstract

Abstract Ionic surfactants and near-infrared laser dyes formed complexes which were extracted into organic solvents as ion pairs. Surfactants were determined spectrophotometrically by measuring the near-infrared absorbance and fluorescence of the ion pair in the organic solvent. Several of the commercially available near infrared dyes have been found suitable for surfactant determination in water using this technique. The excess near-infrared dye coextracted into the organic solvent was determined by blank extractions. The calibration curves were linear within two orders of magnitude of surfactant concentrations. Non-linear calibration curves are obtained for wider concentration range of surfactants. This method using the recently developed near-infrared laser diode intracavity technique was applied to the determination of SDS in water. Lower detection limits and ease of operation are the major advantages of using this new laser diode technique. The extraction efficiency of different solvent systems was e...

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