Transcript Chapter 6.4

Chapter 6.4
Acids and Bases in the Home
SOAP
• Dissolves in both
grease and water.
• Soaps are
emulsifiers
• Emulsion is a
mixture of things
that normally don’t
mix.
• You need an
emulsifer to help!
Soap
• The nonpolar side of a soap molecule is “attached”
(attracted to) nonpolar grease and oil, the polar
side hangs on to the water, and the dirt slips off
your hands and is pulled down the drain, trapped,
along with the water molecules, by that pesky soap
molecule!
What you don’t need to know about
soap....
• Lots of detail in top paragraph on pg 208,
about the chemical reaction involved in
making soap. Don’t worry about it.
• Just know that one end of the molecule is
nonpolar and dissolves the grease or oil,
and the other end is polar, and dissolves in
water.
Detergents
• Soap doesn’t work
well in “hard water”
• Hard water = water
with lots of
dissolved ions like
Mg, Ca, and Fe
• Soap + hard water =
soap SCUM!!!!
Soaps vs Detergent – both have
one polar and one nonpolar “end”,
but...
• (soap has COO- or
carboxylate group)
• detergent has SO3group, known as
sulfonate group
• derived from animal
fat
• derived from
petroleum
Ammonia solution
• solution of ammonia gas, water,
ammonium ions, hydroxide ions.
• hydroxide ions mix with grease
• forms an emulsion.
• NH3 + H2O  NH4 + OH
•

Disinfectants kill bacteria.
• Bleach is a disinfectant.
• Bleach also removes color
from clothing.
• http://www.clorox.com/science/rmp/how.h
tml
Antacids
• weak bases to
neutralize
excess
stomach acid.
Shampoos
• pH balanced
• usually between
• 5 and 8
Acids and Bases in the Kitchen
• Lemon juice keeps
apples from
oxidizing.
• Oxidation is what
causes the apple to
turn brown after you
cut it (when it is
exposed to oxygen
in the air)
Making yogurt
• Remember when we
added vinegar
(acidic) to milk and
it curdled?
• Similar process in
making yogurt,
when bacteria
convert lactose
(milk sugar) to lactic
acid.