When forming a micelle, molecules such as fatty acids

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
2 replies · 2K views
lha08
Messages
158
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


When forming a micelle, molecules such as fatty acids, detergents and lysophospholids form micelles on the basis that the cross sectional area of the head group (I'm guessing the polar part that interacts with water) must be greater than the acyl side chain...but what exactly is the acyl side chain? Is it a hydrocarbon?


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution

 
on Phys.org


Yes, the acyl side chain is a hydrocarbon (often >10 carbons long) or some other hydrophobic group.
 


Low molecular surfactants form small micelles. The head group is turned to aqueos solution, while hydrophobic tail (alcyl chain, or other) form the core of the micelles.

Polymer micelles are the core-shell structures with diluted corona from hydrophilic chains and dense core of hydrophobic chains.

There is some general information on polymer micelle self-assembly here http://softmat.net/2012/05/26/polymer-micelles-as-drug-carriers/