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Soap -- a Detergent A detergent is anything that cleans, especially if it removes oily or greasy dirt. One particular kind of detergent is soap. Soaps are detergents in the sense that they help clean oily and greasy dirt from fabrics, metals, our skin and hair. We restrict the term soap to the sodium salts of long-chain carboxylic acids. A carboxylic acid is marked by the presence of a carboxyl group, -CO2H. With the anion of the carboxyl group balanced by a sodium cation and tied by a covalent bond to a long chain of -CH2- groups that terminate in a CH3- group, we have a soap molecule. We can generalize the molecular structure of a soap molecule as
Like sodium chloride and other ionic compounds, that ionic end tends to dissolve in water, but not in hydrocarbon solvents. As a result, one molecule has two opposite and contradictory tendencies. A hydrophilic structure is attracted towards water molecules but shun hydrocarbons and other oily and greasy substances. A hydrophobic structure shuns water but mixes easily with those very oily, greasy substances that repel the hydrophilic, or charged, part. Next: How Soap Cleans |
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