Saponification
Saponification
Class: ______________________
Subject : ______________________________________
Topic : ______________________________________
Submitted to : ___________________________________
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CERTIFICATE
THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT ___________________________OF
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acknowledgement
I would like to express my special thanks to my
project.
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Contents:-
✓Front page of the project
✓Certificate
✓Acknowledgement
✓ Aim
✓Purpose
✓Introduction
✓Theory / Details of project work
✓Chemicals Required
✓ Result
✓Conclusion
✓Bibliography
✓A blank page for Teacher's Remarks
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Aim:- To Make Toilet Soap ( Through Saponification)
Introduction:- I performed experiment and made toilet soap using the process of
Saponification.
Which is the process in which triglycerides are combined with a strong base to form fatty
acid metal salts during the process. The distribution of unsaturated and saturated fatty acid
determines the hardness, aroma, cleansing, lather, and moisturizing abilities of soaps.
Theory :-
Soaps and detergents are essential to personal and public health. They safely remove
germs, soils and other contaminants and help us to stay healthy and make our surroundings
more pleasant. Soaps are made from fats and oils or their fatty acids.
• There are two groups of fatty acids: saturated fatty acids and unsaturated fatty
acids.
Saturated fatty acids:Fatty acids contain carbon-carbon single bonds called saturated fatty
acids.
Examples: stearic acid (C17H35COOH) & palmitic acid (C15H31COOH)
Unsaturated fatty acids:Unsaturated fatty acids contain one or more double bonds
between carbon atoms.
Example: Oleic acid (C17H33COOH)
If the fatty acid has a single carbon-carbon double bond in the molecule, it is known as a
mono-unsaturated fatty acid. Oleic acid is a mono-unsaturated fatty acid.
If a fatty acid has two or more carbon-carbon double bonds in the molecule, it is known
as poly-unsaturated fatty acid.
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Linoleic acid { CH3(CH2)4CH=CHCH2CH=CH(CH2)7COOH } is a poly-unsaturated fatty acid. It
contains two double bonds.
Long chain fatty acids always exist as triglycerides and are found in fats and oils.
Triglycerides are esters of fatty acids and are formed by combining fatty acids with glycerol.
Glycerol has three alcohol functional groups (-OH group) and fatty acids have the carboxyl
group (-COOH group). Since glycerol has three –OH groups, three fatty acids must react
with one glycerol molecule to make three ester functional groups and form triesters of
glycerol or triglyceride. During this process three molecules of water are eliminated. The
three fatty acids may or may not be identical.
The long chain fatty acids can be of either plant origin (linseed oil, castor oil, soya bean,
coconut oil) or animal origin (tallow from cattle and sheep). In general, fats/oils from plant
origin are high in unsaturated and low in saturated fatty acids. Fats/oils from animal source
are high in saturated and low in unsaturated fatty acids.
• SOAP
Soaps are sodium or potassium salts of long chain fatty acids. When triglycerides in fat/oil
react with aqueous NaOH or KOH, they are converted into soap and glycerol. This is called
alkaline hydrolysis of esters. Since this reaction leads to the formation of soap, it is called
the Saponification process.
The soap molecule has two parts: a polar group (-COO-Na+) and a non-polar group (R-
hydrocarbon part). The polar group is called the head and the non-polar group is called the
tail. Thus, the soap molecule has a polar head and a non-polar hydrocarbon tail. The polar
head is hydrophilic in nature (water loving) and the non-polar tail is hydrophobic (water
repelling) in nature.
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The saponification reaction is exothermic in nature, because heat is liberated during the
process. The soap formed remains in suspension form in the mixture. Soap is precipitated
as a solid from the suspension by adding common salt to the suspension. This process is
called Salting out of Soap.
• Types of Soap
Depending upon the nature of alkali used in the production of soap, they are classified into
two types.
The sodium salt of long chain fatty acid is known as hard soap. It is difficult to dissolve in
water. It is used as laundry soap.
The potassium salt of long chain fatty acid is known as soft soap, as it produces more lather.
It is used as toilet soap and shaving soap.
• Hard soap
• Soft soap
Since soaps have free alkali ions, they are alkaline in nature. Hence, the soap solutions are
slippery to the touch.
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Details of project work
➢ Materials required:
• Vegetable oil (castor oil, olive oil, coconut oil or palm oil)
• 20% sodium hydroxide solution
• Common salt
• Measuring cylinders
• Glass beaker (250 ml)
• Blue and red litmus papers
• Glass rod
• Bunsen burner
• Wire gauze
• Tripod stand
• Filter funnel
• Filter paper
• Spatula
• Knife
➢ Procedure:
• Take 25 ml of coconut oil in a measuring cylinder and pour it into a 250 ml glass beaker.
• Measure 30 ml of 20% NaOH solution in another measuring cylinder and add it into the beaker
containing vegetable oil.
• Vigorously stir the mixture using a glass rod.
• Touch the beaker from outside. It is observed that the beaker is warm.
• Place the beaker on a wire gauze placed over a tripod stand.
• Heat the beaker using a Bunsen burner till the mixture become a whitish paste.
• Remove the beaker from the flame and allow it to cool.
• Dip a red litmus paper in the suspension formed.
• When dipped in the suspension, the red litmus paper changes its colour to blue.
• Dip a blue litmus paper in the suspension.
• The colour of blue litmus paper remains the same.
• To the above suspension, add 15g of common salt and stir it well with a glass rod.
• After adding common salt, soap in the suspension gets precipitated out as solid.
• Take a filter funnel and place a filter paper in it and fix it in a stand.
• Place a beaker below the funnel.
• Pour the contents of the beaker into the funnel over a glass rod and filter the contents of the beaker.
• After filtration, soap is left behind in the filter paper.
• Transfer the soap into another filter paper using a spatula and dry it by pressing with another filter paper.
• Then, cut it into desired shape with a knife.
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➢ Chemicals Required:-
• Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) [Caustic Soda].
• Sodium chloride (NaCl) [Common Salt].
Result:-
• When 20% NaOH solution was added to the beaker containing vegetable oil, it was observed that the
beaker was warm when touched from the outside.
• A whitish suspension was formed by heating the mixture of vegetable oil and 20% NaOH solution.
• Red litmus paper changed colour to blue when dipped in suspension. Blue litmus paper was not
affected by the suspension.
• After adding common salt, the soap in suspension form precipitated out as solid.
Conclusion:-
• The reaction between vegetable oil and sodium hydroxide solution is exothermic in nature because heat
is liberated during the reaction.
• The white suspension formed is made up of soap and glycerol. The process of formation of soap is
called saponification.
• Test using red and blue litmus papers shows that soap suspension is basic in nature and not acidic in
nature.
• The process of precipitation of soap from the suspension is called salting out.
Precautions:-
• Do not touch the NaOH solution with bare hands as it may burn the skin.
• Do not breathe the fumes of NaOH or let the fumes get in your eyes. Keep the windows of the laboratory
open.
• The mixture of oil and alkali should be stirred thoroughly.
• It is necessary to stir the soap solution after adding common salt to it, in order to precipitate out the soap
in solid form.
Bibliography:-
Youtube Video
{Saponification: The process of Making Soap - MeitY OLabs}
By The channel: amritacreate
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A blank page for Teacher's Remarks:
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