Cleansing Agents
Chemistry in Everyday Life: Cleansing Agents
What You'll Learn
- Saponification reaction and how soaps are made from fats/oils
- Micelle formation and how soaps remove oily dirt from surfaces
- Why soaps form scum in hard water and how detergents overcome this
- Classification of detergents: anionic, cationic, non-ionic with examples
- Biodegradability issue with branched-chain synthetic detergents
Level 1 — Core Concepts
Soaps — Saponification Reaction
Soaps are sodium or potassium salts of long-chain fatty acids made by hydrolysing fats/oils in alkaline solution.
Saponification Reaction:
Fat/Oil (triglyceride) + 3NaOH → Soap (3 × RCOONa) + Glycerol
(sodium salt of fatty acid)
- NaOH → hard soap (bar soap): sodium stearate (C₁₇H₃₅COONa), sodium palmitate
- KOH → soft soap (shaving cream, liquid soap): potassium salts — softer texture
| Fat/Oil Used | Soap Produced | Properties |
|---|---|---|
| Coconut oil + NaOH | Sodium laurate/myristate | Lathers well in sea water |
| Animal fat (tallow) + NaOH | Sodium stearate/palmitate | Standard bar soap |
| Linseed oil + KOH | Potassium linolenate | Soft, used in paints/varnishes |
Micelle Formation — Cleansing Mechanism
Soap molecule structure:
CH₃–(CH₂)₁₄–CH₂–CH₂–COO⁻Na⁺
|___________________________| |___|
Hydrophobic tail Hydrophilic head
(non-polar, "water-hating") (polar ionic, "water-loving")
Step-by-step cleansing action:
- Soap dissolves in water; ionises → RCOO⁻ + Na⁺
- Soap molecules orientate at water-oil interface — hydrophobic tail buries into oil/grease, hydrophilic head stays in water
- With agitation, soap molecules encapsulate oil droplets — micelle forms (spherical aggregate)
- In micelle: hydrophobic tails point INWARD (towards oil), hydrophilic heads point OUTWARD (towards water)
- Micelle is suspended in water (stabilised by negative charges on surface repelling each other)
- Oil/dirt trapped inside micelle → washed away with water
Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC): minimum soap concentration at which micelles form spontaneously.
Soaps in Hard Water — Scum Formation
Hard water contains Ca²⁺ and Mg²⁺ ions (from dissolved CaCO₃, MgSO₄).
2RCOONa + CaCl₂ → (RCOO)₂Ca↓ + 2NaCl
(soap) (hard water) (scum — insoluble)
- Calcium and magnesium salts of fatty acids are insoluble → precipitate as grey scum
- Soap is wasted and lathering is poor
- Scum deposits on clothes and bathtubs
Detergents — Overcoming Hard Water Problem
Detergents are synthetic cleansing agents whose calcium and magnesium salts remain soluble → no scum formation.
Types of Detergents
1. Anionic Detergents
- Carry negative charge on the hydrophilic end
- Example: Sodium lauryl sulphate (sodium dodecyl sulphate, SDS) — CH₃(CH₂)₁₁OSO₃⁻Na⁺
- Also: Sodium alkylbenzenesulphonates
- Used in: shampoos, dishwashing liquids, toothpastes
2. Cationic Detergents
- Carry positive charge on the hydrophilic end (quaternary ammonium salts)
- Example: Cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) — C₁₆H₃₃N⁺(CH₃)₃ Br⁻
- Germicidal action: positively charged head disrupts negatively charged bacterial cell membranes
- Used as: fabric softeners, hair conditioners, disinfectants, antiseptics
3. Non-Ionic Detergents
- No ionic charge; hydrophilicity from polar –OH or –O– groups
- Example: Polyethylene glycol esters, Span, Tween series
- Mild; used in: dishwashing, personal care, pharmaceutical formulations
| Type | Example | Charge | Special Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anionic | Sodium lauryl sulphate | Negative | Shampoo, toothpaste |
| Cationic | CTAB | Positive | Germicidal, fabric softener |
| Non-ionic | Polyethylene glycol | None | Mild cleansing, pharmaceuticals |
Biodegradability of Detergents
Problem with early synthetic detergents: Branched-chain alkyl groups (e.g., branched alkylbenzene sulphonates) resist microbial degradation → persist in water bodies → cause foaming in rivers and lakes.
Solution: Linear (straight-chain) alkyl groups are biodegradable — soil bacteria can oxidise from the end of the chain (beta-oxidation).
Branched chain: –CH(CH₃)–CH₂–CH(CH₃)– → NOT biodegradable (bacteria cannot attack tertiary C)
Linear chain: –CH₂–CH₂–CH₂–CH₂– → Biodegradable (terminal oxidation possible)
Modern detergents use linear alkylbenzenesulphonates (LAS) instead of branched-chain TPS (tetrapropylene benzene sulphonate).
Level 2 — JEE Depth
Thermodynamics of Micelle Formation
Micelle formation is entropy-driven (not enthalpy-driven):
- Hydrophobic tails disrupt the hydrogen-bonded structure of water (increases disorder of water)
- Aggregation of hydrophobic tails releases bound water → large increase in entropy of solvent
- ΔG = ΔH – TΔS; despite small positive ΔH, large TΔS makes ΔG negative → spontaneous
Soap vs Detergent — Quantitative Comparison
| Property | Soap | Detergent |
|---|---|---|
| Raw material | Natural fats/oils | Petroleum (petrochemical) |
| Behaviour in hard water | Forms scum (Ca/Mg salts insoluble) | No scum (Ca/Mg salts soluble) |
| Biodegradability | Fully biodegradable | Depends on chain branching |
| pH | ~9–10 (mildly alkaline) | Can be formulated at any pH |
| Effectiveness in acidic water | Poor (fatty acid precipitates) | Good |
Emulsification vs Micelle Formation
- Emulsification = stabilising a bulk oil-water mixture (large droplets)
- Micelle = molecular-level self-assembly (~5 nm diameter) of soap molecules around oil molecules
Both use the amphiphilic nature of soap/detergent but operate at different scales.
CTAB's Germicidal Mechanism
CTAB (cationic detergent) carries positive charge → attracted to negatively charged bacterial cell membrane (teichoic acids in gram +ve, lipopolysaccharide in gram −ve) → inserts into membrane → disrupts bilayer integrity → lysis → bacterial death.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Saponification and soap identification
Problem: A triglyceride of stearic acid (C₁₇H₃₅COOH) is treated with excess
NaOH solution and heated. Write the products. What type of soap is formed?
Identify the ionic nature of the soap in water.
Step 1: Identify the reaction type
Triglyceride + NaOH → Saponification (alkaline hydrolysis of ester bonds)
Step 2: Write the generalised reaction
(C₁₇H₃₅COO)₃C₃H₅ + 3NaOH → 3 C₁₇H₃₅COONa + C₃H₅(OH)₃
Glyceryl tristearate Sodium hydroxide Sodium stearate Glycerol
(hard soap)
Step 3: Type of soap
NaOH → sodium salt → HARD soap (bar soap)
KOH would give potassium stearate → soft/liquid soap
Step 4: Ionic dissociation in water
C₁₇H₃₅COONa → C₁₇H₃₅COO⁻ + Na⁺
Hydrophobic part: C₁₇H₃₅– (stearate chain)
Hydrophilic part: –COO⁻ (carboxylate anion)
→ This is an ANIONIC surfactant (negative charge on active end)
Answer: Products = Sodium stearate (hard soap) + Glycerol
Soap type = Hard soap (NaOH); anionic surfactant
Example 2: Hard water scum problem and detergent advantage
Problem: A student washes clothes using soap in water containing 200 ppm
CaCl₂. Explain what happens and suggest a better alternative.
Step 1: Reaction of soap with Ca²⁺ ions
2C₁₇H₃₅COONa + CaCl₂ → (C₁₇H₃₅COO)₂Ca↓ + 2NaCl
(sodium stearate) (calcium stearate — insoluble SCUM)
Step 2: Consequences
- Insoluble precipitate forms before any cleansing can occur
- Soap molecules are "used up" by Ca²⁺ before reaching fabric
- Remaining CaSt₂ deposits on clothes → grey/white residue
- Poor lathering → inefficient cleansing
Step 3: Better alternative — anionic detergent
Sodium lauryl sulphate (SDS): CH₃(CH₂)₁₁OSO₃⁻Na⁺
Reaction with Ca²⁺:
2CH₃(CH₂)₁₁OSO₃Na + CaCl₂ → [CH₃(CH₂)₁₁OSO₃]₂Ca + 2NaCl
Calcium dodecyl sulphate is SOLUBLE in water (unlike calcium stearate)
→ No scum formed → effective cleansing even in hard water
→ Micelles still form normally
Answer: Soap forms insoluble calcium stearate scum in hard water,
wasting soap and leaving deposits. Anionic detergent (sodium lauryl
sulphate) should be used — its calcium salt remains soluble, allowing
normal micelle formation.
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It's Wrong | Correct Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Saying soap is an anionic detergent | Soap is a separate category (natural salt of fatty acid); "detergent" technically refers to synthetic surfactants | Soap = RCOONa (carboxylate); anionic detergent = ROSO₃Na or RSO₃Na (sulphate/sulphonate) |
| Thinking micelle interior is polar | The interior of a micelle contains the hydrophobic tails — it is non-polar | Micelle interior = non-polar (oil-dissolving); exterior (hydrophilic heads) = polar, faces water |
| Confusing cationic detergent with regular soap | Cationic detergents carry + charge and have germicidal properties unlike soap | CTAB = cationic; SDS = anionic; soap = anionic but different structure; only cationics are routinely germicidal |
| Assuming all synthetic detergents are non-biodegradable | Only branched-chain detergents resist degradation; linear-chain detergents are biodegradable | Linear alkylbenzenesulphonates (LAS) are biodegradable; old branched TPS detergents were not |
Quick Check
Q1. Saponification is the reaction of a fat/oil with:
A) Dilute HCl
B) Concentrated H₂SO₄
C) NaOH or KOH solution
D) Na₂CO₃ solution
Q2. In a soap micelle, the hydrophobic tails are oriented:
A) Outward, towards the surrounding water
B) Inward, away from the surrounding water
C) Randomly throughout the micelle
D) Adsorbed on the outer surface
Q3. Soaps form scum in hard water because:
A) Soap hydrolyses in the presence of Ca²⁺ ions
B) Calcium and magnesium salts of fatty acids are insoluble
C) Hard water raises the pH, precipitating fatty acids
D) Ca²⁺ ions break the micelle structure
Q4. Which type of detergent has germicidal properties and is used as a fabric softener?
A) Anionic detergent
B) Non-ionic detergent
C) Cationic detergent
D) Zwitterionic detergent
Q5. Branched-chain synthetic detergents cause environmental problems because:
A) They react with oxygen in water to form toxic by-products
B) Soil bacteria cannot degrade the branched alkyl chain
C) They form insoluble salts with heavy metals in river water
D) They increase the BOD of water bodies dramatically
Answer Key: 1-C | 2-B | 3-B | 4-C | 5-B
NCERT Links
- NCERT Class 12 Chemistry — Chapter 16: Chemistry in Everyday Life
- Pages 492–498 (cleansing agents)
- Key sections: 16.4 Soaps, 16.5 Synthetic Detergents
- Figures 16.2, 16.3: Micelle formation and cleansing action diagrams
- Cross-reference: NCERT Class 12 Chapter 1 (The Solid State) is NOT relevant; see Chapter 5 (Surface Chemistry) for colloidal parallels
Drishti
🎯 Exam Tips
- Saponification equation with glycerol as by-product is a frequently tested one-liner
- Know the charge on each detergent type: anionic (−), cationic (+), non-ionic (0) — CTAB = cationic = germicidal
- Micelle interior = non-polar; exterior = polar (hydrophilic) — this is always tested in the correct orientation
- Branched chain = non-biodegradable is a classic assertion-reason MCQ trap
📊 Weightage
- Cleansing agents: 0–1 question per JEE Main paper
- Often paired with the drugs/food questions in the Chemistry in Everyday Life section
- Strong conceptual understanding helps with Surface Chemistry questions too
🔗 Related Topics
- Surface Chemistry (colloids, emulsions, adsorption — surfactant behaviour)
- Esters and Carboxylic Acids (soap = salt of carboxylic acid)
- Biomolecules (fats = triglycerides → saponification substrate)
- Environmental Chemistry (detergent biodegradability → water pollution)
📝 Revision Checklist
- Write saponification reaction for NaOH and KOH; identify hard vs soft soap
- Describe micelle formation step-by-step with orientation of hydrophilic/hydrophobic parts
- Write reaction of soap with CaCl₂ (hard water scum)
- Name one example each of anionic, cationic, and non-ionic detergent
- Explain why CTAB has germicidal properties
- State why branched-chain detergents are non-biodegradable
- Distinguish between emulsification and micelle formation
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What You'll Learn
- Level 1 — Core Concepts
- Level 2 — JEE Depth
- Worked Examples
Master this topic with Drishti OS
Get unlimited mock tests, AI-powered mentorship, and complete video courses when you join.
Start Free Practice