How soap works

25 Jun, 2021 - 00:06 0 Views
How soap works The benefits of handwashing with soap are numerous

The ManicaPost

 

Friday Lessons with Uncle Jay

Handwashing with soap is easy, inexpensive, and it saves lives.

Seems like common sense, but how does handwashing with soap actually work? Why can’t you just use water? What even is soap?

To answer these questions, we go back to school.

An ancient remedy
First, a history lesson. Humans have been using soap for a long, long time. The earliest recorded evidence of the production of soap dates back to around 2800 BC in ancient Babylon.

 

Long before humans understood modern chemistry or biology, they noticed that certain materials, when mixed with water, did a much better job of cleaning than water alone.

At the most basic level, soap is a special type of salt derived from vegetable or animal fats or oils—for example, tallow (rendered beef fat), coconut oil, and olive oil are all popular soap bases.

The oil or fat is combined with an alkaline metal solution, which breaks it down into the salt. Depending on additives, by-products, and materials used, the final soap product can be solid, liquid, thick, thin, oily, or greasy.

All types of soap do the same thing: remove dirt and the disease-causing germs it contains.

Removing dirt and germs
So, how does soap clean the dirt, grease, and oils off of your hands? To answer that, we get into a chemistry class.

You’ve heard the saying — oil and water do not mix.

On a chemical level, that’s because the fatty molecules that make up oil, grease, and dirt are all non-polar molecules that don’t have a charge, while water molecules are polar. That’s why you get separate layers when you mix cooking oil with water or vinegar.

This is important to understand for handwashing, because when disease-causing germs in faecal matter or dirt get on your hands after using the toilet or touching a contaminated surface, they mix with the natural oils on your skin and stay there.

When you rinse your hands with water only, it’s ineffective against the germy oils that have lodged onto your skin. The water slips right off without mixing, just like it does with cooking oil.

That’s where soap comes in.

Because soap is salt derived from an oil or fat, it has a unique chemical structure that looks like a balloon. The balloon head is the salt—a charged, polar molecule—and it’s connected to a string or tail of non-polar fatty acids.

 

The soap molecule can therefore act like a double-agent: the salty end is attracted to water, while the fatty tail is attracted to the dirt or oil.

When you mix soap with dirt and water, the soap molecules break up the dirt and the bacteria it contains by forming circles around individual droplets—the fatty chains go in the middle facing the dirt, while the salt balloon tops form the outside of the circle facing the surrounding water.

 

The wheel-like structure formed by the circle of soap molecules around the dirt or oil droplet is called a micelle.

Soap molecules dislodge dirt, oil, and grease particles — and the disease-causing germs they carry — from your hands, one micelle at a time.

When you wash your hands with soap, it dislodges the dirt, grease, oils, and disease-ridden fecal matter particles on your hands by creating these micelles.

 

Surrounded by the soap, the oil molecules become suspended and distributed in the water rather than stubbornly clinging to your skin. This allows the dirt and germs on your skin—or on clothing, surfaces, or towels—to be rinsed away with the water. Ta-da!

Benefits of handwashing
The benefits of handwashing with soap are numerous. It significantly reduces the risk of diarrhea, typhoid, respiratory illnesses, and lots of other waterborne and infectious diseases.

It is estimated that universal handwashing with soap could prevent 30 percent of all diarrhea cases.

The problem is that, despite the low cost and ease of using soap, handwashing with soap is rarely practiced as often as it needs to be.

 

Handwashing with soap requires water and soap to be available when and where people are relieving themselves, and 2,3 billion people worldwide still lack access to basic sanitation.

 

Education and behavior change interventions are needed, too. We can change this. Universal handwashing with soap is an essential part of the toolkit required to defeat diarrheal disease and help every child thrive.

 

To reach this goal, governments, the private sector, civil society, and other stakeholders need to work together to promote handwashing with soap alongside clean water and sanitation.

We all need to give each other a hand – a clean hand, that is!
Thankfully, soap is here to help make that happen. — www.defeatdd.org

 

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