Except that the addition of citric acid doesn't lower the pH. It increases the superfat and adds sodium citrate to the bar.
I read that Brambleberrry thread in its entirety, and I am skeptical. Just because the author asserts that the end pH is 7, it does not make it so. I suppose I could attempt this recipe for myself and see for myself and I may just do that. But the conversation below if filled with errors on the part of the OP which gives me pause: for example, because the citric acid is added at trace, that will lower the pH as opposed to simply raising the superfat and producing sodium citrate. It is common knowledge (thank you Kevin Dunn) that soap batter at trace is still very active, saponification has barely begun, and adding 1% of citric acid then or upfront is not going to make a material difference. Also there is the dubious assertion by the OP that silicone molds "boil" the soap because it can't breathe. Last time, I checked coated freezer paper doesn't breathe, nor does wood. I have seen the pockmarking she describes in silicone molds when doing CPOP, but it has nothing to do with breathing.
While I think that the goal of more pH neutral soap is laudable, I have my doubts that this method is the way to go about it.
^^This is how I can tell no one takes the time to actually look at the link I put up. Oh well.
Yes, when adding citric acid to any soap, be it a sodium soap, or potassium, the result is a salt of an acid, ie sodium citrate. And yes, if you add it on it's own to your soap, if will essentially superfat your soap, or really, you won't have soap at all. In that case, you are looking at a chemical reaction something like this:
Lye + Water + Fatty Acids--> Soap
Soap + Citric Acid--> Oils + Salt of Citrate + Water
In the post from The Sage Forum that I linked, once or twice even, it explains that in order to prevent the added citric acid from essentially taking lye away from the saponification process, in the attempt to lower the pH, you must use sodium citrate. Or create it by combining lye to citric acid in solution. The chemical equation is this:
Citric Acid + Sodium Hydroxide --> Sodium Citrate + Water + Heat
C6H8O7 + 3NaOH --> NaC6H5O7 + 3H2O + HEAT
Essentially, what you will do is 1 or 2 things: A) do a lye excess that will allow the acid to latch on and convert to a salt of citrate. or B) Discount your water just enough to set aside and create the appropriate citrate solution for your recipe, and add it at the beginning with your oils, or lye solution. Or add it in at trace. If you're doing a liquid soap, you have the aded advantage, once again, to wait unti your dilution phase to make the proper ph adjustments.
I've actually been working on this for the last 24 hours. Problem is, because I only have phenol drops, I cannot get a reading below 8.2. So far, my drops have come up clear after working with a 50/50 potassium citrate concentration, at 6ml of solution, added to 2oz of glycerin method liquid soap. The soap has also remained clear. There are other folks who are follow what I'm doing, and 1 lady is actually seeing what she can do with baking soda, which she found to thicken her soap immensely, while lowering her pH, and flat lining at 8.5 I can't remember if hers clouded or not. I'll be working again on this, later tonight, since I took the time to create a full range pH indicator... really nifty watching red cabbage juice change colors the way it did when exposed to different acids and bases.:grin: