<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><Articles><Article><id>119</id><JournalTitle>OFLOXACIN MICROEMULSION</JournalTitle><Abstract>Microemulsions are thermodynamically stable, but are only found under carefully defined conditions. One way to
characterize these systems is by whether the domains are in droplets or continuous. Characterizing the systems in this way
results in three types of microemulsions: oil-in-water (o/w), water-in-oil (w/o), and bicontinuous. Generally, one would assume
that whichever phase was a larger volume would be the continuous phase, but this is not always the case. Surfactants are
molecules that typically contain a polar head group and an polar tail. They are surface-active and microstructure forming
molecules with a strong chemical dipole. They can be ionic (cationic or anionic), nonionic, or zwitter ionic. Surfactant
molecules self-associate due to various inter and intra molecular forces as well as entropy considerations. All of these serve to
optimize the free-energy overall. For example, when surfactant is mixed with oil and water, they accumulate at the oil/water
interface, because it is thermodynamically favorable. The surfactant molecules can arrange themselves in a variety of shapes.
They can form spherical micelles, rod-shaped micelles, a hexagonal phase (consisting of rod-shaped micelles), lamellar (sheet)
phases, reverse micelles, or hexagonal reverse micelles.</Abstract><Email>pravalikarun@gmail.com</Email><articletype>Research</articletype><volume>8</volume><issue>2</issue><year>2018</year><keyword>Ofloxacin, Microemulsion, Formulation.</keyword><AUTHORS>Pravallika M,Jyothshna Devi K,Umasankar K,Jayachandra Reddy P</AUTHORS><afflication>Pravallika M,Jyothshna Devi K,Umasankar K,Jayachandra Reddy P</afflication></Article></Articles>