surfactancy
Surfactancy is the quality or state of being surface-active, describing the ability of a substance to reduce surface or interfacial tension and to accumulate at interfaces such as air–water or oil–water. Substances with surfactant activity are typically amphiphilic, possessing both hydrophilic and lipophilic regions. When present in solution, these compounds orient at interfaces with their hydrophobic tails in nonpolar media and their polar heads in polar media, lowering interfacial tension and often leading to the formation of micelles at higher concentrations.
Key measures of surfactancy include reduction of surface tension, dynamic surface tension, and interfacial tension. The
Classification and examples: surfactants are commonly categorized as ionic (anionic, cationic), nonionic, and zwitterionic. Examples include
Applications span detergents, emulsifiers, foaming agents, wetting agents, and dispersants in cleaning, cosmetics, food, pharmaceuticals, and