LisaBoBisa
Well-Known Member
Chemistry experts, please forgive any wrong wording.
After 2 batches that shouldn't develop DOS did in my humid apartment, I've fixed the humidity, but I'm also second-guessing my understanding of DOS, HP, and rancidity in soap.
Can soap salts go rancid? Is it only the superfat that potentially causes DOS?
So oils and fatty acids cause DOS when they go rancid. (@DeeAnna Thanks so much for this resource). For the last year, I figured that meant soap salts are safe... that the oils that get saponified are locked down, safe from oxidation, and I only need to worry about my superfat oxidizing. But a soap salt is a sodium ion and a fatty acid ion. Does that mean the fatty acid ion in a soap salt can go rancid and cause DOS? Which means a 0% SF soap could get DOS even in a perfect situation where there's no excess oil?
If not, my new bottle of lavender EO from BB might be bad, but I've always gotten great products from them...
After 2 batches that shouldn't develop DOS did in my humid apartment, I've fixed the humidity, but I'm also second-guessing my understanding of DOS, HP, and rancidity in soap.
Can soap salts go rancid? Is it only the superfat that potentially causes DOS?
So oils and fatty acids cause DOS when they go rancid. (@DeeAnna Thanks so much for this resource). For the last year, I figured that meant soap salts are safe... that the oils that get saponified are locked down, safe from oxidation, and I only need to worry about my superfat oxidizing. But a soap salt is a sodium ion and a fatty acid ion. Does that mean the fatty acid ion in a soap salt can go rancid and cause DOS? Which means a 0% SF soap could get DOS even in a perfect situation where there's no excess oil?
If not, my new bottle of lavender EO from BB might be bad, but I've always gotten great products from them...