Page 174 - Introduction to Colloid and Surface Chemistry
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The solid-liquid  interface  163




           •Q-~s






         Figure 6.7


         lead sulphide to float. In this way the components of a mixed ore can
         be separated.
          The  detailed  theory of  flotation  is a  little  more  complicated than
        indicated  by the  above account. Bubble adhesion  is maximum when
        there  is only 5-15  per  cent  monolayer coverage  by the  collector  oil
        and  decreases  with  further  coverage.  It  is  thought  that  when  the
        bubble  and  particle  interfaces  merge,  penetration  of  the  film  of
        collector  oil  around  the  particle  by  the  film  of  foaming  agent
        around  the  bubble  occurs.  This  interlocking between  the  two films
        stabilises  the  air  bubble-particle  system  and  is,  therefore,  most
        favoured  when the  particles  are  only  partly  covered  with  a film of
        collector  oil.  The  function  of  the  foaming  agent  as  such  may,
        therefore,  be of secondary importance as the particles themselves act
        as foam  stabilisers  (see  Chapter  10).
          Flotation  is  also  used  to  enrich  fuels  (e.g.  coal  and  oil)  and  as a
        purification  procedure  for  effluents  and  chemical processing inter-
        mediates.



        Detergency     84

        Detergency  is  the  theory  and  practice  of  dirt  removal  from  solid
        surfaces  by  surface  chemical means.  It  accounts for  the  bulk  of  all
        surfactant  usage
          Soaps  have  been  used  as  detergents  for  many  centuries.  Soap
        normally  consists  of  the  sodium  or  potassium  salts  of various long-
        chain  fatty  acids  and  is  manufactured  by  the  saponification  of
        glyceride  oils  and  fats  (e.g.  tallow)  with  NaOH  or  KOH,  giving
        glycerol  as a by-product:
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