"....when combining sodium citrate with lye should not react..."
Yes, that is correct.
"...but then how do you explain the soap getting softer when adding sodium citrate to the mix? ..."
Well, why not? Just cuz it doesn't react with lye, doesn't mean it can't get into trouble otherwise.
Sodium citrate is a humectant, meaning it wants to draw water to it and form a "complex". To a chemist, a complex is not a disturbing psychological problem; it is a loose association of molecules linked by weak chemical bonds. It's like a bunch of kids who hang out together -- if you find one, you'll find them all. If you add enough sodium citrate to a bar soap, you may see some softening as the sodium citrate molecule pulls water to itself to form a large lump of molecules. This will alter the crystalline structure of the soap framework. A rough analogy might be for my hypothetical bunch of kids to go to a school dance. The bunch of kids is so large, it alters the arrangement of the dancers -- they have to change how they dance so they can move around the bunch of kids.
A sodium ion, on the other hand, is very small and very strong. It wants to pull any and all suitable molecules and ions as close to it as possible. The result is the structure becomes more compact and stronger, rather than larger and weaker. And, yes, Morpheus, this is exactly like the effect of sodium on clay soil.
Yes, that is correct.
"...but then how do you explain the soap getting softer when adding sodium citrate to the mix? ..."
Well, why not? Just cuz it doesn't react with lye, doesn't mean it can't get into trouble otherwise.
Sodium citrate is a humectant, meaning it wants to draw water to it and form a "complex". To a chemist, a complex is not a disturbing psychological problem; it is a loose association of molecules linked by weak chemical bonds. It's like a bunch of kids who hang out together -- if you find one, you'll find them all. If you add enough sodium citrate to a bar soap, you may see some softening as the sodium citrate molecule pulls water to itself to form a large lump of molecules. This will alter the crystalline structure of the soap framework. A rough analogy might be for my hypothetical bunch of kids to go to a school dance. The bunch of kids is so large, it alters the arrangement of the dancers -- they have to change how they dance so they can move around the bunch of kids.
A sodium ion, on the other hand, is very small and very strong. It wants to pull any and all suitable molecules and ions as close to it as possible. The result is the structure becomes more compact and stronger, rather than larger and weaker. And, yes, Morpheus, this is exactly like the effect of sodium on clay soil.
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