How Does Surfactant Reduce Surface Tension?

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Surfactants have both polar and non-polar groups, allowing them to arrange at the surface of a liquid and disrupt intermolecular bonds. The discussion clarifies that while surfactant-surfactant bonds exist, they are weaker than the hydrogen bonds between water molecules. This displacement of water molecules by larger surfactant molecules leads to a reduction in surface tension, as the overall bonding strength of the displaced water is greater than that of the surfactant interactions. The key takeaway is that surfactants effectively lower surface tension by disrupting stronger water-water interactions.
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Hello everyone,

surten2.gif


Ok I know surfactant has a polar and non polar group and then go to the surface and break the bonds. My question is the surfactant would still arrange itself like this picture, meaning surfactant and surfactant would have strong bonds at the surface. So how does this reduce surface tension, is surfactant surfactant bond less strong than eg water water bond here? Thanks :smile:
 

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is surfactant surfactant bond less strong than eg water water bond here?

Simple answer: Yes.
Better answer: Not on a molecule-by-molecule basis. But the surfactant molecule is big, so it displaces quite a few water molecules at the surface. The surfactant-surfactant bonding is weaker than the combined hydrogen bonding of all those waters it displaced.
 
alxm said:
Simple answer: Yes.
Better answer: Not on a molecule-by-molecule basis. But the surfactant molecule is big, so it displaces quite a few water molecules at the surface. The surfactant-surfactant bonding is weaker than the combined hydrogen bonding of all those waters it displaced.

Thanks alxm :smile: I didn't think this topic would be answered.
 
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