Hey all
So, in dribs and drabs over the past few months I've been reading about how soap is made, and I have a few outstanding questions I would like you to clear up.
1) rendered fat is a mixture of fatty acids yeah? And different fats have a different ratio of the different acids (plus glycerine)? So for example, in theory if you mixed all the different acids in the correct ratio for tallow (so stearic acid, oleic acid etc etc), would the soap perform identically to if you just used tallow? Or is the whole more than the sum of the parts?
2) From what I have read, commercial stearic acid is generally made from tallow by separating the acids (the first stage of saponification). So how can most "vegan" soaps get away with calling themselves vegan when they almost all have stearic acid added? Vegan foods aren't allowed to use gelatin, and I feel like this is analogous.
3) is Sodium Tallowate and Potassium Tallowate actually a thing? It feels made up. Because chemically speaking, tallow isn't a fatty acid but rather a mixture of acids. So when you mix the sodium hydroxide with tallow the acids split and are neutralized by the alkali and you get sodium stearate, sodium oleicate (or whatever it would be called). But sodium Tallowate? Really? The only thing that I can think of is that by Sodium Tallowate they mean the ratio of different salts (sodium stearate etc) that would occurs when mixing tallow with the alkali.
I think that's all I have for now. I may come back with more later. Looking forward to someone with much more chemistry chiming in. I assume @Anthony or @Barrister and Mann have some solid answers.
So, in dribs and drabs over the past few months I've been reading about how soap is made, and I have a few outstanding questions I would like you to clear up.
1) rendered fat is a mixture of fatty acids yeah? And different fats have a different ratio of the different acids (plus glycerine)? So for example, in theory if you mixed all the different acids in the correct ratio for tallow (so stearic acid, oleic acid etc etc), would the soap perform identically to if you just used tallow? Or is the whole more than the sum of the parts?
2) From what I have read, commercial stearic acid is generally made from tallow by separating the acids (the first stage of saponification). So how can most "vegan" soaps get away with calling themselves vegan when they almost all have stearic acid added? Vegan foods aren't allowed to use gelatin, and I feel like this is analogous.
3) is Sodium Tallowate and Potassium Tallowate actually a thing? It feels made up. Because chemically speaking, tallow isn't a fatty acid but rather a mixture of acids. So when you mix the sodium hydroxide with tallow the acids split and are neutralized by the alkali and you get sodium stearate, sodium oleicate (or whatever it would be called). But sodium Tallowate? Really? The only thing that I can think of is that by Sodium Tallowate they mean the ratio of different salts (sodium stearate etc) that would occurs when mixing tallow with the alkali.
I think that's all I have for now. I may come back with more later. Looking forward to someone with much more chemistry chiming in. I assume @Anthony or @Barrister and Mann have some solid answers.