Help! Maybe someone has an answer to this.. my family and friends and complaining that my soap bars aren't "lasting very long", maybe a month, they say. How do I make them last longer? Do I try a water discount??? :thumbdown:
- Use a higher percentage of harder oils, soaps with mostly soft oils like olive will dissolve faster unless they have a very long cure!
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Were they quoting solubility in terms of how much can dissolve in a given amount of water? Trouble is, that doesn't tell you how fast something dissolves.According to Scientific Soapmaking, sodium oleate (predominant soap of olive oil) is less soluble in water than sodium laurate (predominant soap of coconut oil). Therefore, in theory, an olive oil based soap should last longer than a coconut oil based soap. In fact sodium laurate appears to be the most soluble of all the standard soaps that we create.
Were they quoting solubility in terms of how much can dissolve in a given amount of water? Trouble is, that doesn't tell you how fast something dissolves.
I add sodium lactate powder from lotioncrafters...2 tsps. per pound of oil, added to the water before adding the lye...it's not a magic bullet, but does slow "shower melt" http://www.lotioncrafter.com/sodium-lactate_powder.html
depending on the size of the bar, my 4.5 oz bar lasts about a month for 2 people...natural soap doesn't last as long as the store bought commercial detergent bars.
Interesting...That additional salt (similar to adding NaCl) probably speeds up the initial saponification and gives the harder bar to start. So perhaps the solution to longer lasting bars is a higher dose of unsaturated fats for reduced water solubility combined with reduced water/added salt to increase initial mechanical hardness. You could then tack on some sugar to increase the lather so you're not left bubble-less!
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