4.6 Review

Role of micellar nanoreactors in organic chemistry: Green and synthetic surfactant review

Journal

SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY AND PHARMACY
Volume 30, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scp.2022.100875

Keywords

Biosurfactant; Organic synthesis; Micelles; Surfactant; Microorganisms

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Over the last few decades, surface active compounds in aqueous media have become the most favorable option for overcoming the challenges of insolubility and hydrolytic breakdown of non-polar compounds. Biosurfactants, as a promising alternative, possess low toxicity, functionality under adverse conditions, and biodegradable nature, making them suitable for replacing harmful organic solvents in organic chemistry.
Over the last few decades surface active compounds in aqueous media have proven to be the most benign alternative for overcoming the difficulty of insolubility and hydrolytic breakdown of numerous non-polar compounds in aqueous medium. Surfactants have the unique ability to from micelles when they reach the critical micelle concentration, form emulsion and also help in solubilizing immiscible organic reagents in organic reactions and hence are a valuable asset in organic chemistry. Biosurfactants or green surfactants are amphiphilic compounds, often extracellularly secreted by variety of plants, animals and microorganisms as a means of secondary metabolites by utilizing varieties of waste raw materials and are a promising candidate to replace harmful organic solvents as well as synthetically designed surfactants owing of their remarkable traits like low toxicity, functionality under adverse conditions, based on renewable ingredients, and biodegradable nature, there is growing interest in this issue. Numerous organic reactions in water are now possible without the use of rather toxic and non-biodegradable organic solvents, thanks to the advent of new and greener biosurfactants into the field of organic chemistry.

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