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How do detergents work based on surface chemistry?

Here’s a explanation:


How Detergents Work (Surface Chemistry)

  1. Structure of Detergent Molecules:
    • Hydrophobic tail: Avoids water, attaches to grease or oil.
    • Hydrophilic head: Likes water, interacts with water molecules.
  2. Formation of Micelles:
    • When detergent is added to water, molecules cluster into micelles.
    • Oil/dirt is trapped inside the micelle.
  3. Cleaning Action:
    • The hydrophilic heads allow the micelles to stay suspended in water.
    • When rinsed, the micelles carry dirt away, cleaning the surface.

Key Idea from Surface Chemistry:

  • Detergents reduce surface tension of water.
  • This allows water to spread and penetrate dirt more easily.
  • Micelles form because of surface interactions at the oil-water interface.

Example:

  • Washing clothes, dishes, and removing grease.

Simple tip:

  • Detergents → hydrophobic tail grabs dirt → hydrophilic head interacts with water → dirt washed away

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