@pcm81
Did you look at the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS)
for the product
Is "SuperClean" the only product you are interested in
I am interested in the chemistry driving these products.
In many cases the MSDS will omit some ingredients as a "trade secret".
Specifically for super clean the MSDS states:
https://www.superclean.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/2016-SuperClean-Degreaser-SDS-v2.0.pdfSodium Metasilicate <5
Sodium hydroxide <5
Surfactant, blend 1-10
The units are Concentration wt/wt
I measured the pH of this degreaser (since i have a gallon of it) to be 12.01.
It seems to me, these types of products, similarly to drug industry, are many brand names that use slightly different formulations to differentiate themselves from each other; but they all are basically the same active ingredient.
My research so far revealed that Sodium Metasilicate is basically a coagulant/deflocculant agent, but if that is all that it is, them sodium phosphate or other phosphates should work as well or may be even better. Based on my recent reading it seems that industry is moving away from phosphates and so silicates are now used. While that change makes sense on industrial scale to reduce phosphates leaching into ground water, for home use, would a sodium phosphate + sodium hydroxide be a better / cheaper / more effective degreaser than commercial solution at $25 per gallon?
I am basically trying to understand the chemistry and list of ingredients for de-greasers.
From what i gathered so far, an effective detergent should have 3 main components, a wetting agent, active ingredient and an emulsifier.
For metal oxides the active ingredient is some kind of acid. For grease and oil it is some kind of base.For example phosphoric acid and sodium hydroxide.
What would be other chemicals to fill the roles of wetting agent and an emulsifier for metallic (metal oxides) and organic (grease) dirt?
What other "dirt" types did i leave out?
Am I correct to say that a degreaser will chemically react with oil/grease to change it into a water soluble form, while something like alcohol will simply dissolve oil/greases while leaving their molecular structure intact? Hence when alcohol dissolves the grease and evaporates, the leftovers is grease again?
I know i am asking allot of questions that seem to be "all over the place"; but really i am just trying to get the "complete" big picture with "necessary properties" as well as list of common substances that can be used as components of cleaners. I am actually interested in chemistry behind the process of surface cleaning.