The critical micelle concentration (CMC) is the concentration at which surfactant molecules begin forming micelles. Determining the CMC is important because it indicates the surface activity, aggregation behavior, solubilization efficiency, and stability of surfactants, which are critical in applications such as detergents, emulsions, coatings, pharmaceuticals, and formulation development.

KEY INSIGHTS

  1. The value of the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of a surfactant in aq. solution has been widely studied by different techniques. This paper describes the pros and cons of each of these techniques.
  2. The article also tabulates the CMC of general surfactants mentioned in most literature.

BULLET POINTS

  1. The article highlights techniques to experimentally calculate the CMC of surfactants which includes surface and physicochemical methods, spectroscopic methods, light scattering, electrochemical methods and others.
  2. The article also highlights the pros and cons of each of these methods and also the CMC values of some commonly utilized industrial surfactants.

KEYWORDS

Surfactant; Critical Micelle Concentration; Techniques and its Pros and Cons; CMC values of common surfactants

DETAILED REPORT

A surfactant is a molecule containing long-chain hydrocarbon ‘tail’ and polar ‘head’. In an aqueous solution it moves freely; upon a certain concentration above which it forms micelle. This concentration is called the CMC. Experimentally CMC is determined by plotting a graph of a suitable physical property as a function of surfactant concentration. An abrupt change in slope marks the CMC.

Importance of CMC

Determining the CMC is important because it indicates the surface activity, aggregation behaviour, solubilization efficiency, and stability of surfactants, which are critical in applications such as detergents, emulsions, coatings, pharmaceuticals, and formulation development. The article highlights the various experimental techniques along with pros and cons of each. The article also mentions the CMC values of common surfactants used industrially.

Techniques to determine CMC and their pros and cons

A separate PDF has been attached below that consolidates all the details of techniques to calculate the CMC of surfactants, their principles and key features along with advantages and disadvantages of each technique.

Factors Affecting CMC

1. Hydrophobic Chain Length and Structure

Increasing the hydrophobic alkyl chain length generally lowers the CMC due to stronger hydrophobic interactions that favour micellization. Gemini surfactants show an even greater reduction in CMC compared to conventional surfactants. In contrast, branching of the hydrophobic chain increases CMC because branched chains pack less efficiently within the micellar core. However, some long-chain Gemini surfactants (C16–C20) exhibit unusually high CMC values due to self-coiling and formation of sub-micellar aggregates that hinder efficient micelle formation.

2. Nature of the Head Group

The chemical structure, charge density, and geometry of the polar head group strongly influence electrostatic interactions between surfactant molecules. Higher electrostatic repulsion between similarly charged head groups generally increases the CMC.

Among Gemini surfactants, anionic systems often exhibit slightly lower CMC values than comparable cationic analogues. In zwitterionic and ionic surfactants, the nature of the head group also determines the extent of ion pairing, hydration, and interfacial interactions, all of which affect micelle formation.

3. Counterions and Electrolytes

For ionic surfactants, counterion type and electrolyte concentration strongly affect the CMC. Added electrolytes generally lower the CMC by screening electrostatic repulsion between charged head groups. Stronger counterion binding further promotes micellization, with CMC typically decreasing in the order Li⁺ > Na⁺ > K⁺ > Cs⁺. Similarly, weakly hydrated and highly polarizable anions such as I⁻ and ClO₄⁻ reduce the CMC more effectively than Cl⁻ or Br⁻. At very high salt concentrations, ion pairing and interfacial adsorption may produce more complex effects on CMC.

4. Temperature

Temperature moderately affects the CMC due to two opposing effects: disruption of structured water around hydrophobic groups, which increases the CMC, and reduced hydration of polar head groups, which favors micellization and lowers the CMC. Consequently, many ionic surfactants show a parabolic temperature dependence, where the CMC decreases initially and then increases at higher temperatures. Temperature also influences micellization indirectly through changes in solubility and Krafft temperature.

5. Solvent Composition and Organic Additives

The presence of organic solvents generally increases the CMC because organic additives reduce the solvophobic driving force responsible for micellization. Organic solvents improve the solubility of hydrophobic chains in the bulk phase, thereby making aggregation less favorable.

The magnitude of this effect depends on solvent polarity and molecular structure. Solvents such as acetonitrile, formamide, and 2-methoxyethanol have all been reported to increase CMC, particularly at concentrations above approximately 20% v/v, where the aqueous character of the medium becomes substantially altered.

6. Presence of Polymers and Polyelectrolytes

Polymers and polyelectrolytes can strongly modify surfactant aggregation behavior through electrostatic interactions, hydrophobic association, or complex formation. Such interactions may either promote or inhibit micellization depending on the polymer structure and charge characteristics. In many surfactant–polymer systems, the effective CMC shifts due to formation of polymer-bound aggregates or mixed association structures prior to conventional micelle formation.

7. Spacer Group Effects in Gemini Surfactants

In Gemini surfactants, the spacer group connecting the two surfactant moieties significantly affects aggregation behavior. Although the spacer generally exerts a smaller influence than alkyl chain length, its flexibility, hydrophobicity, and length can alter molecular packing and micelle geometry. For hydrophobic polymethylene spacers, the CMC often exhibits non-monotonic behavior with spacer length, reaching a maximum at intermediate spacer lengths before decreasing again as the spacer folds into the micellar core. Hydrophilic poly (ethylene oxide) spacers generally produce progressively higher CMC values with increasing spacer length. Rigid spacers tend to produce lower CMC values than flexible spacers because they facilitate more ordered packing within the aggregate.

8. Molecular Organization and Aggregation Dynamics

Certain surfactants exhibit complex aggregation behavior beyond conventional micelle formation. Bis-imidazolium Gemini surfactants, for example, display slow exchange between aggregated and free surfactant states on the NMR timescale, unlike conventional ammonium surfactants which typically exhibit rapid exchange.

Spacer length, π–π interactions, ion pairing, interfacial orientation, and sub-micellar aggregation can all influence the apparent or experimentally determined CMC values. In some systems, stable homogeneous micelles are formed only at concentrations substantially higher than the initially observed critical aggregation concentration (CAC).

9. Environmental Sensitivity and Impurities

CMC values are highly sensitive to environmental conditions, including solution composition, impurities, ionic strength, pH, and sample purity. Even minor contaminants can alter intermolecular interactions and produce measurable variations in experimentally determined CMC values. Consequently, reported literature values may vary depending on experimental technique and measurement conditions.

CMC values of common surfactants (data obtained from literature survey)

SurfactantCMC value (mM)Determination technique
SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate)8-9.2Conductimetry
SDS7.8 – 8.58UV/VIS-Absorption Spectroscopy
SDS6.7-9.18Fluorescence
SDS6.56-6.69Titration By Probe
SDS6.53-9.12Tensiometry
SDS8.84Densimetry
SDS7.3Weight Measurement
SDS8.23 – 8.3Capillary Electrophoresis
SDS8.10Refractive Index
SDS8.30Light Scattering
TTABr3.9Conductance
TTAB3.4Light Scattering
TTABr3.5BZA- Absorption
TTABr3.5Fluorescence
TTAB (tetra decyl trimethyl ammonium bromide)3.74Weight Measurement
C12E9 (poly oxyethylene-9-benzoylacetone)0.16UV/VIS-Absorption Spectroscopy
C12E90.17Fluorescence
NaDC (deoxycholic acid, sodium salt monohydrate)2.32Tensiometry
NaDC7.08Conductimetry
NaDC6.26Densimetry
NaDC8.2Fluorescence
NaDC5.82 Ultrasound Spectroscopy
SDDS (N-lauroyl sarcosine sodium salt)14.33 Tensiometry
SDDS14.25Conductimetry
SDDS16.02Densimetry
SDDS16.38Fluorescence
SDDS14.47Ultrasound Spectroscopy
PEG8-L (polyethylene glycol (8) monolaurate)0.1Tensiometry
PEG8-L0.23Fluorescence
PEG8-S (polyethylene glycol (8) monostearate)0.04Tensiometry
PEG8-S0.06Fluorescence
CTAB0.8 – 0.81Titration By Probe
CTAB (cetyl triammonium bromide)0.62Fluorescence
CTAB0.93Capillary Electrophoresis
CTAB0.98Tensiometry
BS-12 (dodecyl dimethyl betaine)2.2 – 2.39Titration By Probe
BS-122.24Fluorescence
Triton X-1000.18 – 0.29Titration By Probe
Triton X-1000.16Fluorescence
Triton X-1000.7Tensiometry
Triton X-1000.21Refractive Index
Triton X-1000.28Light Scattering
DDBAC (dodecyl dimethylbenzyl ammonium chloride)6.84 – 8.63Titration By Probe
DTAC (dodecyl trimethyl ammonium chloride)14.59 – 16.27Titration By Probe
DTAC22Light Scattering
Tween-200.027Titration By Probe
Tween 200.05Tensiometry
Tween 800.019Tensiometry
CHAPS [(3-cholamido propyl) dimethyl ammonio]-1-propanesulfonate7.09Fluorescence
CHAPS5.8Capillary Electrophoresis
Brij – 350.091Light Scattering
Brij – 560.078Weight Measurement
TTAC (Trimethyl Tetradecyl Ammonium Chloride)5.4Light Scattering
DDAPS (N-Dodecyl-N,N-dimethyl-3-ammonio-1-propanesulfonate)3.40Light Scattering
CTAC (cetyltrimethylammonium chloride)1.58Refractive Index

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