The CMC generally depends on the method of measuring the samples, since
A and
B depend on the properties of the solution such as
conductance,
photochemical characteristics, or
surface tension. When the degree of aggregation is
monodisperse, then the CMC is not related to the method of measurement. On the other hand, when the degree of aggregation is
polydisperse, then CMC is related to both the method of measurement and the dispersion. The common procedure to determine the CMC from experimental data is to look for the intersection (
inflection point) of two straight lines traced through plots of the measured property versus the surfactant concentration. This visual data analysis method is highly subjective and can lead to very different CMC values depending on the type of representation, the quality of the data and the chosen interval around the CMC. A preferred method is the fit of the experimental data with a model of the measured property. Fit functions for properties such as electrical conductivity, surface tension, NMR chemical shifts, absorption, self-diffusion coefficients, fluorescence intensity and mean translational diffusion coefficient of fluorescent dyes in surfactant solutions have been presented. These fit functions are based on a model for the concentrations of monomeric and micellised surfactants in solution, which establishes a well-defined analytical definition of the CMC, independent from the technique. The CMC is the concentration of surfactants in the bulk at which micelles start forming. The word
bulk is important because surfactants partition between the bulk and interface and CMC is independent of interface and is therefore a characteristic of the surfactant molecule. In most situations, such as surface tension measurements or conductivity measurements, the amount of surfactant at the interface is negligible compared to that in the bulk and CMC can be approximated by the total concentration. In practice, CMC data is usually collected using laboratory instruments which allow the process to be partially automated, for instance by using specialised
tensiometers. ==Practical considerations==