Abstract

The surface-active (surface tension, adsorption, molecule cross-sectional area in the adsorption monomolecular layer) and colloidal (viscosity, critical micelle concentration, solubilization) properties in aqueous and hydrochloric acid solutions of anionic surfactant alkylbenzenesulfonic acid (ABSA) were studied. Surface activity of ABSA increases in the presence of hydrochloric acid. Two inflections were established on adsorption isotherms with inorganic acid content of 5 and 10 wt. %, which are indicative of stepwise micelle formation. The ABSA dissociation is suppressed in the presence of hydrochloric acid, and therefore it behaves as a nonionic surfactant, forming micelles at lower concentrations. Mixed micelles, formed by dissociated and non-dissociated surfactant particles, are organized with an increase of ABSA content in mixture. The value of the surfactant limiting adsorption increases significantly at small hydrochloric acid amounts in comparison with an aqueous solution. The formed monomolecular layer is denser in the presence of inorganic acid than in an aqueous solution. The solubilization of Sudan I dye in alkylbenzenesulfonic acid increases with increasing in solution acidity. The extremum points on isotherms of solubilizing ability with 5 and 10 wt. % HCl content are observed at surfactant concentrations corresponding to the beginning and end of the formation of micelles containing alkylbenzenesulfonate ion.

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