Lab Report Soap Making
Lab Report Soap Making
ACID-BASE TITRATION
M.V.L LIM, J. JANEA, L.V. MEDRANO, J.M. OLARITA, AND C. ZOZOBRADO
X- Gluon
Philippine Science High School Central Visayas Campus
Talaytay, Argao, Cebu
Date Performed: January 22, 2016
Date Submitted: February 10, 2016
ABSTRACT
Soap is one of the commercial products essential to our health as it promotes
cleanliness and preserves our skin from the scorching heat of the sun and from
external pollution such as dust, germs, and bacteria. Learning how to make soap
and the chemistry behind it is as important as its benefit. In order to make basic
soap, an experiment was performed, dealing with the process of saponification, a
process that produces soap, usually from fats and lye. In the experiment, the fats
used were common oils, such as olive oil, vegetable oil, and unsalted butter,
whereas the lye used was sodium hydroxide (NaOH). The fats, which are the acids
and the lye, which is the base underwent saponification to form a glycerin and a
salt, which is the soap, the final product of the experiment.
INTRODUCTION
Straight-chain monocarboxylic
acids, called fatty acids, are seldom
found as free molecules in nature but
are most often a part of a larger
molecule called a triglyceride. Soap is
produced
by
the
process
of
saponification, or the hydrolysis of a
triglyceride, the fats and oil, to
produce glycerol and fatty acid salts
from the reaction of the triglyceride
with a strong base such as sodium or
potassium
hydroxide.
The
bond
between the fatty acid and the
glycerol backbone is referred to as an
ester
linkage.
In
the
REFERENCES
[1] Chemistry 122: Synthesis of Soap.
(n.d.). Retrieved September 19, 2015,
from
https://hoeggerfarmyard.com/thefarmyard/soap-making2/saponification-explained/
APPENDIX
RAW DATA
Table 1. Amounts for ingredients used
Pounds
Ounces
Grams
Water
0.028
0.44
12.56
Lye (NaOH)
0.028
0.44
12.56
Oils
0.220
3.53
100.00
Fragrance
0.004
0.07
2.00