@Emmanuel
I just tried this with two bars.
I weighed out grated cp soap into a 10% solution and fully dissolved it to find the ph of my bar. I then weighed and added citric acid to my solution until I reached a ph of 5. I notated the weight of citric acid to make the bar the desired ph.
I then finely grated my soap and weighed it out for a single bar, but got one and a half for my mould (I didn’t measure my mould just eyeballed it) added dry citric acid amount needed to make the bar ph suitable for shampoo and a small amount of scent oil at 1% weight. I then added a small amount of water to get my bar to stick together and then poured it into my mould.
Now that my bar is dry enough to release from the mould and use, here’s what I have noticed on using it:
It’s soft and squishy, and not in a good way. It also does not lather like I want it to. I have to work to get this thing to lather and once it hits my hair, the lather is gone. I’ve slid the bar around on my head and still no distinguishable lather. Does my hair get clean? Doubtful, I’ve washed it several times and I have a greasy feel to my hair afterwards.
I will probably try one more time, but I’m doubtful.
The chemistry goes like this:
If you have two salts (citric acid and sodium tallowate) that are dry, they will typically not react with each other. They need to be in a solution to react. That’s where the tricky part comes in. Because a small amount of solution is needed to bind all the dry ingredients together, and then have that small amount dry up.
Each time the bar is used, it’s going to make a solution on the outside and absorb water to some of the interior, all the while making a solution with two ingredients that will cause each other to break down.
It’s basically fighting a losing battle.
I am right there with you in wanting to make a shampoo bar from CP soap, and I have been on this journey and I identify with your thought process.
Been there done that, but meh, try it yourself