
© May 2020 | IJIRT | Volume 6 Issue 12 | ISSN: 2349-6002
IJIRT 149364 INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INNOVATIVE RESEARCH IN TECHNOLOGY 69
be made of vegetable oils, such as palm oil, and the
product is typically softer. An array of saponifiable
oils and fats are used in the process such as olive,
coconut, palm, cocoa butter to provide different
qualities. For example, olive oil provides mildness in
soap; coconut oil provides lots of lather; while
coconut and palm oils provide hardness. Sometimes
castor oil can also be used as an ebullient. Smaller
amounts of unspecifiable oils and fats that do not
yield soap are sometimes added for further benefits.
Preparation of soap In cold-process and hot-process
soap making, heat may be required for saponification.
Cold-process soap making takes place at a sufficient
temperature to ensure the liquification of the fat
being used.
Unlike cold-processed soap, hot-processed soap can
be used right away because the alkali and fat specify
more quickly at the higher temperatures used in hot-
process soap making. Hot- process soap making was
used when the purity of alkali was unreliable. Cold-
process soap making requires exact measurements of
alkali and fat amounts and computing their ratio,
using saponification charts to ensure that the finished
product is mild and skin-friendly. Hot process In the
hot-process method, alkali and fat are boiled together
at 80100 C until saponification occurs, which the
soap maker can determine by taste or by eye. After
saponification has occurred, the soap is sometime
sprecipitated from the solution by adding salt, and the
excess liquid drained off.
The hot, soft soap is then spooned into a mold. Cold
process A cold-process soap maker first looks up the
saponification value of the fats being used on a
saponification chart, which is then used to calculate
the appropriate amount of alkali. Excess unreacted
alkali in the soap will result in a very high pH and
can burn or irritate skin. Not enough alkali and the
soap are greasy. The alkali is dissolved in water.
Then oils are heated, or melted if they are solid at
room temperature. Once both substances have cooled
to approximately 100-110F (37-43C), and are no
more than 10F (~5.5C) apart, they may be combined.
This alkali-fat mixture is stirred until trace. There are
varying levels of trace. After much stirring, the
mixture turns to the consistency of a thin pudding.
Trace corresponds roughly to viscosity. Essential and
fragrance oils are added at light trace. Introduction to
the experiment Soap samples of various brands are
taken and their foaming capacity is noticed. Various
soap samples are taken separately and their foaming
capacity is observed.
The soap with the maximum foaming capacity is
thus, said to be having the best cleaning capacity. The
test requires to be done with distilled water as well as
with tap water. The test of soap on distilled water
gives the actual strength of the soaps cleaning
capacity. The second test with tap water tests the
effect of Ca2+ and Mg2+ salts on their foaming
capacities.
OBJECTIVE
To compare the foaming capacity of various soaps
General Overall Hydrolysis Reaction
Although the reaction is shown as one step reaction,
it is in fact two steps. The net effect as that the ester
bonds all broken. The glycerol turns back into an
alcohol. The fatty acid is turned into a salt due to the
presence of a basic solution of NaoH. In the carboxyl
group, one oxygen now has a negative charge that
attracts the positive sodium ion. A molecule of soap
consists of two parts.
a) Alkyl group – it is oil soluble
b) Corboxyl group – It is water soluble
Sodium carbonate Effect
Sodium carbonate (also known as washing soda, soda
crystals or soda ash), Na2 CO3, is a sodium salt of
carbonic acid. It most commonly occurs as a
crystalline heptahedra, which readily effloresces to
form a white powder, the monohydrate; and is
domestically well known for its everyday use as a
water softener. It has a cooling alkaline taste, and can
be extracted from the ashes of many plants. It is
synthetically produced in large quantities from table
salt in a process known as the Solvay process.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_carbonate
Sodium carbonate is a white, crystalline and
hygroscopic powder with a purity of > 98 %. There
are two forms of sodium carbonate available, light
soda and dense soda. Impurities of sodium carbonate
may include water (< 1.5 %), sodium chloride (< 0.5
%), sulphate (< 0.1 %), calcium (< 0.1 %), and
magnesium (< 0.1 %) and iron (< 0.004 %). The
purity and the impurity profile depend on the
composition of the raw materials, the production