Hi y'all!
I bought rapeseed wax a while ago, but have not used it yet. I don't know the manufacturer or any other information about it, other that is says on the package "Hydrogenated Rapeseed Oil". To contact the UK supplier and ask for more details about their rapeseed wax, that is worthless, since they will not reply at all (I know that for sure, but it is a long story).
So, I went online to find 1) a saponification value for hydrogenated rapeseed oil and 2) what fatty acids it contain.
I found a sap. value ranging from 200-240 KoH. BUT, I did also find that hydrogenated rapeseed oil contain 42-50% behenic acid (C22) and 8-10% arachidic acid (C20).
(Maybe some hydrogenated rapeseed oils have different compositions, for all I know).
For example in this link (just do a page search for hydrogenated rapeseed oil, and you will find it): http://www.beauty-review.nl/wp-cont...ived-Fatty-Acid-Oils-as-Used-in-Cosmetics.pdf
I have never heard of those fatty acids before (I know nothing about fatty acids in general), and I have of course no clue about what type of soap they will produce, and if I will run into problems by using hydrogenated rapeseed oil as a 10-20%-ish part of a soap. I could not find it out anywhere either.
I could also not find too much information about using hydrogenated rapeseed oil in general in soap. I find some on this forum (I have not really searched for that elswhere). Lets say you make a soap with 100% hydrogenated rapeseed oil (or any other higher percentage), would the behenic and arachic fatty acids give good qualities to the soap or would it be a disaster? I guess that it probably does not matter too much if rapeseed wax is used in a low % of the recipe. But it would be interesting to know what those to fatty acids give to soap, good or bad?
I could try and see what happens (apart from eventual seizing) if I use hydrogenated rapeseed oil in a higher percentage (over 50% perhaps). But, before I waste lye and oils and hours of work + weeks of waiting time to see if anything strange happens during or after curing, I thought I could rather ask here first.
If anybody have any knowledge about what those two fatty acids do in soap, especially behenic acid which can be as high as 50% in rapeseed wax, that would be superb! Thank you in advance
I bought rapeseed wax a while ago, but have not used it yet. I don't know the manufacturer or any other information about it, other that is says on the package "Hydrogenated Rapeseed Oil". To contact the UK supplier and ask for more details about their rapeseed wax, that is worthless, since they will not reply at all (I know that for sure, but it is a long story).
So, I went online to find 1) a saponification value for hydrogenated rapeseed oil and 2) what fatty acids it contain.
I found a sap. value ranging from 200-240 KoH. BUT, I did also find that hydrogenated rapeseed oil contain 42-50% behenic acid (C22) and 8-10% arachidic acid (C20).
(Maybe some hydrogenated rapeseed oils have different compositions, for all I know).
For example in this link (just do a page search for hydrogenated rapeseed oil, and you will find it): http://www.beauty-review.nl/wp-cont...ived-Fatty-Acid-Oils-as-Used-in-Cosmetics.pdf
I have never heard of those fatty acids before (I know nothing about fatty acids in general), and I have of course no clue about what type of soap they will produce, and if I will run into problems by using hydrogenated rapeseed oil as a 10-20%-ish part of a soap. I could not find it out anywhere either.
I could also not find too much information about using hydrogenated rapeseed oil in general in soap. I find some on this forum (I have not really searched for that elswhere). Lets say you make a soap with 100% hydrogenated rapeseed oil (or any other higher percentage), would the behenic and arachic fatty acids give good qualities to the soap or would it be a disaster? I guess that it probably does not matter too much if rapeseed wax is used in a low % of the recipe. But it would be interesting to know what those to fatty acids give to soap, good or bad?
I could try and see what happens (apart from eventual seizing) if I use hydrogenated rapeseed oil in a higher percentage (over 50% perhaps). But, before I waste lye and oils and hours of work + weeks of waiting time to see if anything strange happens during or after curing, I thought I could rather ask here first.
If anybody have any knowledge about what those two fatty acids do in soap, especially behenic acid which can be as high as 50% in rapeseed wax, that would be superb! Thank you in advance