The Handbook of Soap Manufacture | Page 2

W.H. Simmons
Soaps--Milled Soaps--Drying--Milling and Incorporating Colour, Perfume, or Medicament--Perfume--Colouring matter--Neutralising and Superfatting Material--Compressing--Cutting--Stamping--Medicated Soaps--Ether Soap--Floating Soaps--Shaving Soaps--Textile Soaps--Soaps for Woollen, Cotton and Silk Industries--Patent Textile Soaps--Miscellaneous Soaps.
CHAPTER VIII.
SOAP PERFUMES 95
Essential Oils--Source and Preparation--Properties--Artificial and Synthetic Perfumes.
CHAPTER IX.
GLYCERINE MANUFACTURE AND PURIFICATION 111
Treatment of Lyes--Evaporation to Crude Glycerine--Distillation--Distilled and Dynamite Glycerine--Chemically Pure Glycerine--Animal Charcoal for Decolorisation--Glycerine obtained by other methods of Saponification--Yield of Glycerine from Fats and Oils.
CHAPTER X.
ANALYSIS OF RAW MATERIALS, SOAP, AND GLYCERINE 117
Fats and Oils--Alkalies and Alkali Salts--Essential Oils--Soap--Lyes--Crude Glycerine.
CHAPTER XI.
STATISTICS OF THE SOAP INDUSTRY 140
APPENDIX A.
COMPARISON OF DEGREES, TWADDELL AND BAUMé, WITH ACTUAL DENSITIES 147
APPENDIX B.
COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT THERMOMETRIC SCALES 148
APPENDIX C.
TABLE OF THE SPECIFIC GRAVITIES OF SOLUTIONS OF CAUSTIC SODA 149
APPENDIX D.
TABLE OF STRENGTH OF CAUSTIC POTASH SOLUTIONS AT 60° F. 151
INDEX 153
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION.
Definition of Soap--Properties--Hydrolysis--Detergent Action.
It has been said that the use of soap is a gauge of the civilisation of a nation, but though this may perhaps be in a great measure correct at the present day, the use of soap has not always been co-existent with civilisation, for according to Pliny (Nat. Hist., xxviii., 12, 51) soap was first introduced into Rome from Germany, having been discovered by the Gauls, who used the product obtained by mixing goats' tallow and beech ash for giving a bright hue to the hair. In West Central Africa, moreover, the natives, especially the Fanti race, have been accustomed to wash themselves with soap prepared by mixing crude palm oil and water with the ashes of banana and plantain skins. The manufacture of soap seems to have flourished during the eighth century in Italy and Spain, and was introduced into France some five hundred years later, when factories were established at Marseilles for the manufacture of olive-oil soap. Soap does not appear to have been made in England until the fourteenth century, and the first record of soap manufacture in London is in 1524. From this time till the beginning of the nineteenth century the manufacture of soap developed very slowly, being essentially carried on by rule-of-thumb methods, but the classic researches of Chevreul on the constitution of fats at once placed the industry upon a scientific basis, and stimulated by Leblanc's discovery of a process for the commercial manufacture of caustic soda from common salt, the production of soap has advanced by leaps and bounds until it is now one of the most important of British industries.
Definition of Soap.--The word soap (Latin sapo, which is cognate with Latin sebum, tallow) appears to have been originally applied to the product obtained by treating tallow with ashes. In its strictly chemical sense it refers to combinations of fatty acids with metallic bases, a definition which includes not only sodium stearate, oleate and palmitate, which form the bulk of the soaps of commerce, but also the linoleates of lead, manganese, etc., used as driers, and various pharmaceutical preparations, e.g., mercury oleate (Hydrargyri oleatum), zinc oleate and lead plaster, together with a number of other metallic salts of fatty acids. Technically speaking, however, the meaning of the term soap is considerably restricted, being generally limited to the combinations of fatty acids and alkalies, obtained by treating various animal or vegetable fatty matters, or the fatty acids derived therefrom, with soda or potash, the former giving hard soaps, the latter soft soaps.
The use of ammonia as an alkali for soap-making purposes has often been attempted, but owing to the ease with which the resultant soap is decomposed, it can scarcely be looked upon as a product of much commercial value.
H. Jackson has, however, recently patented (Eng. Pat. 6,712, 1906) the use of ammonium oleate for laundry work. This detergent is prepared in the wash-tub at the time of use, and it is claimed that goods are cleansed by merely immersing them in this solution for a short time and rinsing in fresh water.
Neither of the definitions given above includes the sodium and potassium salts of rosin, commonly called rosin soap, for the acid constituents of rosin have been shown to be aromatic, but in view of the analogous properties of these resinates to true soap, they are generally regarded as legitimate constituents of soap, having been used in Great Britain since 1827, and receiving legislative sanction in Holland in 1875.
Other definitions of soap have been given, based not upon its composition, but upon its properties, among which may be mentioned that of Kingzett, who says that "Soap, considered commercially, is a body which on treatment with water liberates alkali," and that of Nuttall, who defines soap as "an alkaline or unctuous substance used in washing and cleansing".
Properties of Soap.--Both soda and potash soaps are readily soluble in either alcohol or hot water. In cold water they dissolve more slowly, and owing to slight decomposition, due to hydrolysis (vide infra), the solution becomes distinctly turbid.
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