One of the stories in this book is the history of Clare soap and chemicals. The company began when America is not yet a country. A man named Jeffel Claire moved to the New World. The company began to be very small and grew to an international scale. Three brothers really started this business. This story is totally historical and not very funny. I noticed that I was drifting these parts of the book. One part I really drew my attention was that when Claire tried to present their soap sales, they started playing the game.
Let's briefly introduce the history of soap by putting everything in the context. Believe it or not, soap was first invented in 2,800 BC. Since bacteria were not invented, antibacterial chemicals were not used in this early soap. However despite this obstacle, the ancients were able to surpass the modern human beings and create BOs. This breaks down the hair of a human being, causing human genetic evolution to become the only mammal that does not completely cover the hair. This situation continued until 1940. The US government was also called "giant chemical company". . So, the dial - up soap company started to put hexachlorophene in soap to kill the bacteria and made our smell better. This situation lasted about 30 years until we discovered that hexachlorophen causes brain damage in infants.
Use soap to remove dirt and oil. But do you know that soap is made of oil? The process of making soap is called saponification. This is a chemical reaction that occurs when oils and fats bond with bases. The most commonly used base is sodium hydroxide, which is a technical term for food grade rye. Historically, fat has been used to make soap. (A little trivial thing is that dial-type soap is taken from the meat packaging facility as a way to use decoration.) Modern soap is made with butter and oil. To start the process, butter is melted in liquid form. The alkaline solution is then slowly introduced into the mixture. Lye is very mean, so I am speaking very slowly. It is the same as you can reduce the oil in your drain pipe, yes, you can eat your skin, so you very carefully mix and wear protective gear
Technically, most modern soaps are not real soap. They are typically mixtures of petroleum-derived surfactants (such as sodium lauryl sulfate) and other chemicals to produce detergents that are suitable for the intended application. Depending on the type of chemicals you use, you can get a very different kind of soap. For example, the use of potash produces liquid soap, and like the bars you get, the lye will form a hard soap. All detergents will follow the same basic principles regardless of how they are used (hair, hands, clothes, cutlery etc). In other words, it will decompose oil and dirt and rinse off with them. It is water. Therefore, for its general purpose, all soaps are technically almost identical.