ISO 4311 specifies a method to determine the critical micellization concentration of anionic and non-ionic surface active agents by measuring surface tension for a concentration series bracketing the CMC and identifying the singular point on a surface tension vs log(concentration) curve.
Droplet Lab can support ISO 4311 workflows by providing a consistent pendant-drop measurement approach for screening/trending and for correlation studies versus plate/ring data, but it does not replicate the plate/stirrup/ring apparatus described by the ISO method.
- CMC value (with units and stated temperature) derived from the breakpoint/singular point on the curve
- Curve-fit/breakpoint quality indicators (e.g., residuals, confidence band, or reviewer acceptance per SOP)
- Optional: surface tension at the CMC (reported only if defined in your SOP)
Acceptance limits and method equivalency are site-specific; if you use an alternative instrument, document a correlation to your chosen ISO 4311 reference apparatus and re-check after major changes (chemistry, containers, cleaning, or operator training).
Prepare a concentration series of solution levels spanning below and above the expected CMC (log-spaced is common), control temperature, and run replicates per concentration under a locked SOP.
Trace contamination, foaming, slow equilibration, or high viscosity can distort the surface tension curve and shift the apparent CMC; bracketing and replicate discipline are required for defensible results.
Include a blank (water) and at least one check liquid or internal control material, apply objective acceptance rules for outliers/failed fits, and document glassware/apparatus cleanliness to protect the determination of surface tension.