Over the years, we have made outstanding contributions to the development
Cosmetics
In cosmetics, surfactants are used for cleansing, foaming, thickening, emulsifying, solubilizing, penetration enhancement, antimicrobial effects, and other special effects. The key property of surfactant molecules that makes them useful cosmetic ingredients is that they are compatible with both water and oil.
Household
Surfactants are used in a wide range of daily supplies that we use in our everyday lives such as dishwashing soaps, laundry detergents, softeners, air fresheners, and more.
In these products, surfactants provide foaming, cleansing, lubricating, emulsifying, solubilizing, dispersion, anti-static, and sterilizing effects.
Mining
Surfactant serves truly diverse roles in the oil and mineral extraction process.
It can lower friction in the drilling process, or it can even be used for flotation in the dressing process using its foaming property.
In addition, it lowers the viscosity of liquid minerals such as crude oil to make the EOR process smoother.
For these mining purposes, non-ionic surfactants are widely used.
I&I cleaning
The Industrial & Institutional (I&I) cleaning sector is the largest single industrial consumer of surfactants. Industrial detergents covers a diverse range of surfactants, additives and applied in many industrial areas to remove pollutants from various objects.
Pharmaceutical
Surfactants are important ingredients used in pharmacy compounding and perform a variety of functions. They can be used to formulate emulsions and suspensions, and they can improve the solubility of poorly soluble drugs in water.
Agricultural
Agricultural surfactants are substances added to pesticide formulations or spray solutions to modify their physical properties and improve their performance. These surfactants are designed to reduce the surface tension of liquids, allowing them to spread more evenly on plant surfaces.