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ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: March 15, 2017

Method could speed up design of more eco-friendly fabric softeners

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The Journal of Physical Chemistry B

In the 1960s, the introduction of fabric softeners transformed rough, scratchy clothes into softer, more comfortable garments. But recently, the products鈥� popularity has dipped in part due to millennials鈥� concern for their potential environmental impact, according to recent news reports. Now one team has developed a better method for evaluating fabric softeners that could lead to potentially 鈥済reener鈥� 鈥� and more millennial-friendly 鈥� versions. Their study appears in ACS鈥� The Journal of Physical Chemistry B.

Fabric softeners鈥� main ingredients are surfactants, which are compounds that stick to clothing during the rinse cycle and make them feel softer. Scientists have been studying fabric softeners for decades, and many believe that surfactants work by forming a lubricating layer on clothing. But to date, no one knows how the softeners work on a molecular level. So, Evdokia K. Oikonomou, Jean-Fran莽ois Berret and colleagues set out to devise a new method to look more closely at the interaction between cotton fabric and fabric softeners as a first step toward developing more eco-friendly products.

The researchers studied how a double-tailed cationic surfactant, which is often used in commercial fabric softeners, would combine with natural cellulose nanocrystals 鈥� a stand-in for cotton 鈥� using multiple techniques including light scattering and optical and electron microscopy. The study showed that the concentration of surfactant affected vesicle size. The concentration of surfactant also affected how these vesicles arranged themselves, sometimes nesting within each other to form multiple layers. The researchers say their technique could speed up manufacturers鈥� assessment of fabric softeners鈥� efficiency and potentially help get newer, more environmentally friendly products to the market faster.

The authors acknowledge funding from , the , the and the .

Note: ACS does not conduct research, but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.

Designing new eco-friendly fabric softeners could get a boost with a new method for studying how they interact with fabrics.
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