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Soap

Soap is produced through saponification, the process of converting fats or oils into soap and alcohol through an alkaline hydrolysis reaction. During this reaction, triglycerides are broken down into glycerol and fatty acids. The fatty acids then react with alkalis like sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide to form salts known as soaps. Soap molecules have a hydrophilic polar head and a hydrophobic non-polar tail, allowing them to emulsify oils and help remove dirt and stains by forming micelles that encapsulate non-polar substances.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
219 views

Soap

Soap is produced through saponification, the process of converting fats or oils into soap and alcohol through an alkaline hydrolysis reaction. During this reaction, triglycerides are broken down into glycerol and fatty acids. The fatty acids then react with alkalis like sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide to form salts known as soaps. Soap molecules have a hydrophilic polar head and a hydrophobic non-polar tail, allowing them to emulsify oils and help remove dirt and stains by forming micelles that encapsulate non-polar substances.
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Production of Soap from Coconut Oil

Experiment No 6
Soap
• Soap is the term for a salt of a fatty acid or for
a variety of cleansing and lubricating products
produced from such a substance.
• Household uses for soaps
include washing, bathing, and other types
of housekeeping, where soaps act
as surfactants, emulsifying oils to enable them
to be carried away by water.
• In industry, they are used as thickeners,
components of some lubricants, and
precursors to catalysts
Saponification
• Saponification is a process that involves
conversion of fat or oil into soap and alcohol
by the action of heat in the presence of
aqueous alkali (e.g. NaOH).
• Soaps are salts of fatty acids whereas fatty
acids are saturated monocarboxylic acids that
have long carbon chains (at least 10)
e.g. CH3(CH2)14COOH.
Soaps are formed by the alkaline hydrolysis
(breaking up) of fats and oils by sodium or
potassium hydroxide by boiling under reflux
conditions:
 Hydrolysis of esters such as fats/oil produces
glycerol and fatty acids. Fats and oils are
triglycerides meaning they are esters which
contain 3 molecules of fatty acid condensed to 1
molecule of the trihydric alcohol, glycerol. So
during hydrolysis, three molecules of soap are
made per molecule of glycerol. (3:1 ratio of fatty
acid:glycerol)
 The hydrolysis is carried out using alkalis (NaOH
or KOH) as catalyst and the fatty acids formed are
changed into sodium or potassium salts (soaps)
 The soaps are ionic and water-soluble.
Structure of Soap
 The long covalent hydrocarbon chain gives rise to the
hydrophobic (water hating) and oil-soluble (non-
polar) properties of the soap molecule (represented
in yellow). The charged carboxylate group
(represented in blue) is attracted to water molecules
(hydrophilic). In this way, soaps are composed of a
hydrophilic head and a hydrophobic tail:
 In solution a soap molecule consists of a long non-
polar hydrocarbon tail (e.g. C17H35-) and a polar head
(-COO-).
Soap Molecule

covalent hydrocarbon chain carboxylate head


O- Na+

O
non-polar, oil-soluble, hydrophobic polar, water-soluble,
hydrophilic
How a soap works
Mechanism of stain/dirt removal
 Roll-up mechanism
 The hydrophobic tails ‘burrow’ into
the droplet of oil or grease.

 The hydrophilic heads are left to


face the surrounding water.

 This results in the formation of a


ball-like structure (a micelle).

 The non-polar substances, such as


oil or grease, are held inside the ball
and suspended in water, to be washed away.

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