In my quest to understand the value of knowing pH to determine soap safety, I decided to experiment a bit. I'll outline what I did and what I plan to do further.
I have 40+ different soaps here at this time, but some are rather close, so I decided to test 10 of those that seemed the most different.
I have a pH meter that is supposedly accurate to .01 pH. It is rather new, so it should be fairly accurate. At least it has been giving expected readings in all the situations I've used it. I have buffers to calibrate and used a 6.86 calibration solution to calibrate. It was already within a few hundredths of a point before calibration. I then made soap solutions using distilled water and an amount of soap that should have made very close to a 1% soap solution.
The meter was rinsed with distilled water between each soap solution. This is the setup:
After testing several soaps and getting the same reading, I decided to test the 5 that were most different. (the 5th didn't make it into the photo)
Soap A: 28% CO, 55 OO, 17% PO 8% SF - 2.5 months old - pH 10.52
Soap B: 70% OO, 15% CO, 5% Castor, 10% PO, 2 egg yolk/lb, beer instead of water, lavender EO, 3% SF , 3 weeks old - pH 10.48
Soap C: 50% Lard, 30% CO, 20% OO, 2 egg yolk/lb, 5% SF tumeric added, 2 months old - pH 10.48
Soap D: 65% Lard, 20% CO, 10% OO, 5% Shea Butter, 5% SF, Beer instead water, cocoa added, peppermint EO. 4 weeks old - pH 10.52
Soap E: Not shown (laundry soap) 100% CO, minus 2% SF, 8 weeks old - pH 10.35
The laundry soap was the lowest pH I tested and those at 10.52 were the highest. Super Fat varied from -2% up to 8%. I don't do lots of scents and only use natural colorants. I did test 2 HP soaps and they were both 10.47 pH. All of these 5 were CP. I have washed with all of these soaps at least a few times. None have been harsh. Even the laundry soap is fine for washing my hands (at least on occasion).
My next tests will be while processing. I plan to test when I pour, at 24 hours, 48 hrs, 1 week and 4 weeks. I will do this series twice, once on a normal soap and one that is 10% lye-heavy. I'm really curious about the 10% lye heavy soap. I already confirmed that 2% lye-heavy is no big deal with some time before using. I'll update the thread as I get new data.
My initial thought is that my soaps will not vary much in pH.
I have 40+ different soaps here at this time, but some are rather close, so I decided to test 10 of those that seemed the most different.
I have a pH meter that is supposedly accurate to .01 pH. It is rather new, so it should be fairly accurate. At least it has been giving expected readings in all the situations I've used it. I have buffers to calibrate and used a 6.86 calibration solution to calibrate. It was already within a few hundredths of a point before calibration. I then made soap solutions using distilled water and an amount of soap that should have made very close to a 1% soap solution.
The meter was rinsed with distilled water between each soap solution. This is the setup:
After testing several soaps and getting the same reading, I decided to test the 5 that were most different. (the 5th didn't make it into the photo)
Soap A: 28% CO, 55 OO, 17% PO 8% SF - 2.5 months old - pH 10.52
Soap B: 70% OO, 15% CO, 5% Castor, 10% PO, 2 egg yolk/lb, beer instead of water, lavender EO, 3% SF , 3 weeks old - pH 10.48
Soap C: 50% Lard, 30% CO, 20% OO, 2 egg yolk/lb, 5% SF tumeric added, 2 months old - pH 10.48
Soap D: 65% Lard, 20% CO, 10% OO, 5% Shea Butter, 5% SF, Beer instead water, cocoa added, peppermint EO. 4 weeks old - pH 10.52
Soap E: Not shown (laundry soap) 100% CO, minus 2% SF, 8 weeks old - pH 10.35
The laundry soap was the lowest pH I tested and those at 10.52 were the highest. Super Fat varied from -2% up to 8%. I don't do lots of scents and only use natural colorants. I did test 2 HP soaps and they were both 10.47 pH. All of these 5 were CP. I have washed with all of these soaps at least a few times. None have been harsh. Even the laundry soap is fine for washing my hands (at least on occasion).
My next tests will be while processing. I plan to test when I pour, at 24 hours, 48 hrs, 1 week and 4 weeks. I will do this series twice, once on a normal soap and one that is 10% lye-heavy. I'm really curious about the 10% lye heavy soap. I already confirmed that 2% lye-heavy is no big deal with some time before using. I'll update the thread as I get new data.
My initial thought is that my soaps will not vary much in pH.