Quaternary ammonium salts are used as
disinfectants,
surfactants,
fabric softeners, and as
antistatic agents (e.g. in
shampoos). In
liquid fabric softeners, the
chloride salts are often used. In
dryer anticling strips, the
sulfate salts are often used. Older aluminium
electrolytic capacitors and
spermicidal jellies also contain quaternary ammonium salts. Quats are also used in contraception formulations, veterinary products, diagnostic testing, vaccine production, and nasal formulations. Concerns have been raised about the level of understanding of safety profile of quat disinfectants on people. As of August 2020, half of disinfectants the
United States Environmental Protection Agency suggested as effective against
COVID-19 contained one of the quats, and often a quat as the sole ingredient.
Salmonella and
E. coli O157:H7 exposed to quats have developed cross resistance to antibiotics. A subject of concern is the potential effect of increased use of quats related to
COVID-19 pandemic on antibiotic resistance in a larger microbial community in nature and engineered environment.
Medicines is one of many
spasmo­lytics (anti-spasm drugs) that feature the quaternary ammonium
functional group. Quaternary ammonium compounds have antimicrobial activity. Quaternary ammonium compounds, especially those containing long alkyl chains, are used as
antimicrobials and
disinfectants. Examples are
benzalkonium chloride,
benzethonium chloride, methylbenzethonium chloride,
cetalkonium chloride,
cetylpyridinium chloride,
cetrimonium,
cetrimide, dofanium chloride,
tetraethylammonium bromide,
didecyldimethylammonium chloride and
domiphen bromide. Also effective against
fungi,
amoebas, and
enveloped viruses (such as
SARS-CoV-2), most quaternary ammonium compounds are believed to act by disrupting the
cell membrane or
viral envelope. (Some QACs, such as
dequalinium and similar bis-QACs, show evidence of a different mode of action.) Quaternary ammonium compounds are lethal to a wide variety of organisms except
endospores and
non-enveloped viruses, both having no accessible membrane coat to attack. It is possible to solve the endospore problem by adding chemicals which force them to germinate. They have reduced efficacy against
gram-negative bacteria,
mycobacteria, and bacteria in
biofilms due to them having additional layers that need to be penetrated or disrupted. Some bacteria such as MRSA have acquired resistance genes,
qacA/B and
qacC/D, that pump the cation out of the cell.
Fabric softeners and hair conditioners In the 1950s,
distearyldimethylammonium chloride (DHTDMAC), was introduced as a
fabric softener. This compound was discontinued because the cation biodegrades too slowly. Contemporary fabric softeners are based on salts of quaternary ammonium cations where the fatty acid is linked to the quaternary center via ester linkages; these are commonly referred to as
betaine-esters or ester-quats and are susceptible to degradation, e.g., by
hydrolysis. Characteristically, the cations contain one or two long
alkyl chains derived from fatty acids linked to an
ethoxylated ammonium salt. Other cationic compounds can be derived from
imidazolium,
guanidinium, substituted amine salts, or quaternary
alkoxy ammonium salts. File:Dimethyldioctadecylammonium chloride.svg|
Distearyldimethylammonium chloride, an early generation
fabric softener with low
biodegradability that was phased out. File:Redrawn diesterquat salt (methanesulfonate anion) related to fabric softeners.png|Another diesterquat, a contemporary fabric softener. File:AltDiesterquatCl.png|Diethyl ester dimethyl ammonium chloride used as a fabric softener. File:DiesterCl.png|Another diesterquat used as a fabric softener. The antistatic qualities that make quaternary ammonium salts useful as fabric softeners also make them useful in
hair conditioners and
shampoos. The idea was pioneered by
Henkel with a 1984 patent. Examples include
cetrimonium chloride and
behentrimonium chloride.
Plant growth retardants Cycocel (chlormequat chloride) reduces plant height by inhibiting the production of
gibberellins, the primary plant hormones responsible for cell elongation. Therefore, their effects are primarily on stem, petiole, and flower stalk tissues. Lesser effects are seen in reductions of leaf expansion, resulting in thicker leaves with darker green color. ==Natural occurrence==