polyethoxylates
Polyethoxylates are a broad class of compounds formed by the ethoxylation of a hydrophobic substrate with ethylene oxide, yielding molecules that contain one or more chains of repeating ethoxy units (-O-CH2-CH2-). They span a range from small oligomers to high-molecular-weight polymeric species and are widely used as nonionic surfactants.
Most common forms are alkyl polyethoxylates (AEOs) derived from fatty alcohols, and alkylphenol polyethoxylates (APEOs) derived
Properties: They are amphiphilic, reducing surface tension; act as emulsifiers, detergents, wetting agents, and solubilizers. Their
Applications: Polyethoxylates are used in household detergents, personal care products, paints, textile processing, paper manufacture, agrochemicals,
Environmental and safety considerations: Many polyethoxylates biodegrade, but their ethoxylate chains can persist in the environment.