I was wanting to use my homemade citrate to see how citrate controls soap scum created by mixing hard water from our well with my liquid soap. I wanted to add these results to the thread I started here:
http://www.soapmakingforum.com/showthread.php?t=52456
Problem is, when I added the citrate to the water and soap solution, the citrate "broke" the soap so I ended up with scummy water that had a layer of fatty acid on the surface. Thinking perhaps I had an excess of citric acid still left in the solution, I added a bit extra baking powder to ensure the acid was fully reacted to citrate. Tried the test again. Same results.
Added a bit of citrate solution to just the liquid soap -- no added water -- and the mixture of citrate and the (originally transparent) LS turned an opaque white.
I'm stumped. My understanding has been that citrate works pretty well to chelate metals and reduce soap scum, and I haven't been hearing people complain about citrate "breaking" their soap.
You other soapy chemistry geeks out there -- what am I missing? Suggestions and thoughts are most appreciated.
19 Nov 2016 update: I found out what the problem was. Other soapers bought commercial sodium citrate and did not report any problems with their liquid soap breaking. After some thought, I realized my homemade sodium citrate solution had to have extra baking soda or citric acid in it. Either of these ingredients would have caused my soap to break.
The solution to this problem is to add a pinch of one ingredient (say citric acid) and see if the mixture starts to fizz again. If it fizzes, then let the fizzing stop naturally, add another pinch of citric acid, let it fizz, and repeat until the last pinch causes no fizzing.
If the mixture doesn't fizz with an added pinch of citric acid, then add a pinch of baking soda and see if that fizzes. If so, then let the fizzing stop naturally, add another pinch of baking soda, let the mixture fizz, and so on until no fizzing happens.
The key is to not get in a hurry -- add a little bit at a time so when the fizzing finally ends, the mixture is as close to pure sodium citrate and water as possible with very little extra citric acid or baking soda. If you overshoot, you could add a bit of the other ingredient to balance things more precisely.