Hydrocarbon Surfactants for CO2: An Impossible Dream?

2007 
It used to be thought that hydrocarbon ionic surfactants were incompatible with dense liquid or supercritical CO2, and fluorination of the chains was necessary to achieve any appreciable solubility. Here it is shown that branching of pendant hydrocarbon chains, especially methylation of the tips, can lead to substantial solubility enhancements in CO2 over normal linear chain hydrocarbon surfactants. In addition, increasing the number of these t-butyl-tipped groups from single-chained, through twin-tailed, to triple-chain surfactants has a profound effect on CO2 compatibility. High-pressure interfacial tension, small-angle neutron scattering, and near infrared spectroscopy have been applied to reveal the effects of surfactant structure on surface activity, aggregation, and solubility in CO2.
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