Hi!
Thought I`d pop in with my 2 cents worth. I use Sodium Gluchonate
*.
So, I live in an area that has soft water. But my family, who live 4 hours away from me, have very hard water. As in, you have to use a hammer to break it appart to be able to drink it (lots of iron and minerals) And since they like to use my soaps I decided to add a chelator - Sodium Gluconate.
I have not noticed anything weird happening to my to my soaps, using sodium gluchonate with a softer type of water. As in nothing. Just creamy bubblyness. And soap scum has gone down to almost nil. Before I started with the SG I noticed a tiny bit of fatty residue in the sink and shower. Nothing dramatic, mind you, but it was definatly there. After I started with SG - nothing.
My family however, noticed a huge difference! After I started with the SG they got
very little build up (or soap scum as you call it) compared to before. Then I could scrape it and get some under my nails.
In my personal experience:
Nothing bad happens when using it in soft water areas.
Something great happens in hard water areas.
I use 1% of the oils (1000 gr. oil = 10 gr. Sodium Gluconate)
I have tested with higher rates, and have found that 1% is adequate in my and my familys area.
*I have used SG for the last 5 or 6 years I think? I have it in all my soaps.
I actually came across it by accident, as I first noticed it in some foods here in Norway, and I got curious about why it was
there in the first place!
("Oh no, it sounds like a poison, I must find out what it is!!")
Yeah, it wasn`t a poison. Obv. Easy there, tiger
Had never heard about it before, so I googled it and found out via
Jungblauzer it had a vartiety of usages, amongst other things, soaps! I googled some more, found a link to a supplier (ebay) and have used it ever since.
PS!
IIRC I think I found some information from this forum actually, I think it was here I actually got the usage rate.