That analogy is not hard to follow, but it doesn't explain the chemistry that I was hoping to find. I've always been a person who like to know why. That does not explain why or how it happens - just that it does.
How did someone initially determine this? I can understand that the lye doesn't use all of the stearic acid before it acts upon another fatty acid, but if the rate of reaction differs, then it should convert the stearic acid faster, leaving a different ratio at the end of saponification compared to the start. I'm curious what that ratio is and how it is determined. By the sounds of it, someone has figured this out, but I'm not finding the detail anywhere.
How did someone initially determine this? I can understand that the lye doesn't use all of the stearic acid before it acts upon another fatty acid, but if the rate of reaction differs, then it should convert the stearic acid faster, leaving a different ratio at the end of saponification compared to the start. I'm curious what that ratio is and how it is determined. By the sounds of it, someone has figured this out, but I'm not finding the detail anywhere.