Saponification Values: Kevin M. Dunn
Saponification Values: Kevin M. Dunn
Saponification Values: Kevin M. Dunn
Kevin M. Dunn
Spring 2006
$Revision: 1.3 $
Saponication Values
Saponication Values
What they are Why they are what they are How to measure them for yourself
Saponication Values
Acknowledgements
Stephen English Kevin Thompson Brad Benedetti Alex Garcia William Slack
144 g NaOH per 1000 g of palm oil 144 g NaOH per kg of palm oil 144 mg NaOH per g of palm oil 144 parts NaOH per thousand parts of palm oil (144 ppt) 14.4 parts NaOH per hundred parts of palm oil (14.4%) 0.144 g NaOH per g of palm oil
144 oz NaOH per 1000 oz of palm oil 144 lb NaOH per 1000 lb of palm oil 144 ton NaOH per 1000 ton of palm oil 0.144 oz NaOH per oz of palm oil 0.144 lb NaOH per lb of palm oil 0.144 ton NaOH per ton of palm oil
SAPs In Practice
144 oz NaOH ? oz NaOH = 120 oz Palm Oil 1000 oz Palm Oil = 17.3 oz NaOH 191 oz NaOH ? oz NaOH = 30 oz Coconut Oil 1000 oz Coconut Oil = 5.7 oz NaOH
You need (17.3 + 5.7) or 23.0 oz of NaOH At 5% discount you need 21.9 oz of NaOH
O Na O
OH
OH O Na O
OH
O Na O
Water
Hexadecane
Alkanes
ethane propane butane pentane hexane heptane octane nonane decane undecane dodecane tridecane tetradecane pentadecane hexadecane C 2 H6 C 3 H8 C4 H10 C5 H12 C6 H14 C7 H16 C8 H18 C9 H20 C10 H22 C 11 H24 C 12 H26 C13 H28 C 14 H30 C 15 H32 C 16 H34
Acids
Alcohols
Esters
Stearic Acid
Fatty Acids
O
lauric acid
myristic acid
palmitic acid
stearic acid
oleic acid
linoleic acid
linolenic acid
Glycerol
O Na O
OH
OH O Na O
OH
O Na O
How many eggs to make a 3-egg omelet? How many dozens of eggs to make a dozen 3-egg omelets? How many gross of eggs to make a gross of 3-egg omelets? How many moles of eggs to make a mole of 3-egg omelets?
How many NaOH to react with one fat? How many dozens of NaOH to react with a dozen fat? How many gross of NaOH to react with a gross of fat? How many moles of NaOH to react with a mole of fat?
Atomic Weights
1 gram of hydrogen = 1 mole 12 gram of carbon = 1 mole 16 gram of oxygen = 1 mole 23 gram of sodium = 1 mole 39 gram of potassium = 1 mole
Formula Weights
40 grams of NaOH = 1 mole (23 + 16 + 1) 56 grams of KOH = 1 mole (39 + 16 + 1) 638 grams of C39H74O6 (glyceryl trilaurate) = 1 mole 806 grams of C51H98O6 (glyceryl tripalmitate) = 1 mole 890 grams of C57H110O6 (glyceryl tristearate) = 1 mole
Stoichiometry
1 mol f at ? g NaOH = 1000 g f at 890 g f at = 135 g NaOH 1 mol f at ? g KOH = 1000 g f at 890 g f at = 189 g KOH 3 mol NaOH 1 mol f at 40 g NaOH 1 mol NaOH
SAPs
Fat glyceryl trilaurate coconut oil glyceryl tripalmitate palm oil glyceryl tristearate tallow g NaOH/kg fat 188 191 149 142 135 140 g KOH/kg fat 263 268 208 199 189 196
The purity of NaOH and KOH will vary from supplier to supplier
Suppose Palm Oil has an SAP between 140 and 146: make 9 batches of soap
139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147 g NaOH / kg oil
Test each cured soap for excess alkali About half of these soaps will be too alkaline for use
Precise weighing of small quantities Battery acid and phenolphthalein KOH and alcohol instead of NaOH and water 20 g of oil or fat Oven curing of sample soaps
The Balance
The Jennings JScale JS-50x can weigh up to 50 g to within 0.01 g. The auto-off feature can be disabled. It uses AAA batteries. It costs about $50.
Weighing Synthetically
Weighing Analytically
Battery Acid
Half-ll a one-quart glass jar with distilled water Analytically weigh 10.XX g of NaOH or KOH into the jar Add 3 drops of 1% phenolphthalein indicator Analytically weigh battery acid into jar until endpoint Record the weight of acid required to neutralize 10.XX g of base
Start of Titration
The Endpoint
In this case it took 33.52 g of acid to titrate 9.96 g of NaOH In this case it took 22.74 g of acid to titrate 10.07 g of KOH
6% Alcoholic KOH
Synthetically weigh 100.00 g of alcoholic KOH into a one-quart glass jar Analytically weigh 20.XX g of melted oil into the jar Screw lid onto jar--lid should have small hole in it Shake the solution until thoroughly mixed Cure in oven for one hour at 160oF
Synthetically weigh 100.00 g of alcoholic KOH into a one-quart glass jar Add distilled water until jar is half full Add 3 drops of 1% phenolphthalein indicator Analytically weigh battery acid into jar until endpoint In this case it took 16.68 g of acid to titrate 100.00 of KOH solution
Remove cured liquid soap from oven Add distilled water until jar is half full Add 3 drops of 1% phenolphthalein indicator Analytically weigh battery acid into jar until endpoint In this case it took 7.02 g of acid to titrate soap
33.52 g acid = 9.96 g NaOH 22.74 g acid = 10.07 g KOH 20.00 g of palm oil to make soap 16.68 g acid = blank 7.02 g acid = soap
About 2 hours, start to nish Save time by testing several oils at once
Several soaps can oven-cure simultaneously The same blank can be used for several soaps
Lye Discount
Lye Discount
Lye Discount
2% Lye Excess
14 12 10 8 pH 6 4 2 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Acid Weight (grams) 60 70 80
Lye Discount
0% Lye Excess
14 12 10 8 pH 6 4 2 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Acid Weight (grams) 60 70 80
Lye Discount
1% Lye Discount
14 12 10 8 pH 6 4 2 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Acid Weight (grams) 60 70 80
Lye Discount
2% Lye Discount
14 12 10 8 pH 6 4 2 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Acid Weight (grams) 60 70 80
Lye Discount
5% Lye Discount
14 12 10 8 pH 6 4 2 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Acid Weight (grams) 60 70 80
Lye Discount
DOS Update
DOS Update
8 additives were tested at 3 different concentrations Treated olive oil soaps were aged at 50oC for 1800 hours Shelf life was determined by measuring color of soaps over time When color density reached twice its initial value, soap was deemed to have expired Ineffective additives: Vitamin E, BHA, Sodium Citrate, Carnosic Acid
DOS Update
Effective Additives
0.03% EDTA 0.07% BHT 0.12% Rosemarinic Acid When buying ROE, maximize Rosemarinic Acid content if possible EDTA was very effective even at very small concentrations
DOS Update
Metal Contamination
EDTA seems to work by sequestering metals Calcium and Iron reduce shelf life Copper has no effect on shelf life Use distilled water if your tap water is high in Calcium or Iron Calcium and Iron may be present in oils or lyes
DOS Update
EDTA Safety
Final Report on the Safety Assessment of EDTA, Calcium Disodium EDTA, Diammonium EDTA, Dipotassium EDTA, Disodium EDTA, TEA-ADTA, Tetrasodium EDTA, Tripotassium EDTA, Trisodium EDTA, HEDTA, and Trisodium HEDTA International Journal of Toxicology, 21, pp. 95-142, 2002
Cosmetic Ingredient Review Expert Panel Oral toxicity in test animals was minimal Dermal toxicity and irritation was minimal Conclusion: EDTA is safe for use in cosmetics
DOS Update
Very small amounts of Nitrilotriacetate can be found in EDTA Nitrilotriacetate is a potential oral carcinogen in rats at large doses Nitrilotriacetate is absorbed in the gut of the rat but not the human Nitrilotriacetate is absorbed in the gut of the rat but not the human Ask for MSDS when you purchase EDTA, look for nitrilotriacetate
Conclusions
Conclusions
You can measure SAP with a $50 scale Excessive lye discount is not necessary You can eliminate DOS A chemistry book for soapmakers? (cavemanchemistry.com)
Conclusions
Questions
Saponication Values
Kevin M. Dunn, Hampden-Sydney College HSMG 2006
(http://cavemanchemistry.com) (http://oldwillknott.com) Jennings JScale JS-50x (http://cynmar.com) Transfer pipettes, phenolphthalein (http://boyercorporation.com) NaOH, KOH Auto Parts Store: battery acid Walmart, etc.: Denatured alcohol
Equations
33.52 g acid = 9.96 g NaOH 20.00 g of palm oil to make soap 16.68 g acid = blank (100.00 g of 6% alcohol) 7.02 g acid = soap
16.68 7.02 g Acid ? g NaOH = 1000 g Fat 20.00 g Fat = 144 g NaOH 9.96 g NaOH 33.52 g Acid
Preventing DOS
Use 0.03% EDTA (0.3 g / kg oil) add to lye Or 0.07% BHT (0.7 g / kg oil) add to lye Or 0.12% Rosemarinic Acid (1.2 g ROE / kg oil) add to oil When buying ROE, maximize Rosemarinic Acid content if possible Ask for MSDS when you purchase EDTA, avoid nitrilotriacetate impurity Avoid Calcium and Iron in water used for soapmaking
EDTA Safety
Final Report on the Safety Assessment of EDTA, Calcium Disodium EDTA, Diammonium EDTA, Dipotassium EDTA, Disodium EDTA, TEA-ADTA, Tetrasodium EDTA, Tripotassium EDTA, Trisodium EDTA, HEDTA, and Trisodium HEDTA International Journal of Toxicology, 21, pp. 95-142, 2002
Cosmetic Ingredient Review Expert Panel Oral toxicity in test animals was minimal Dermal toxicity and irritation was minimal Conclusion: EDTA is safe for use in cosmetics