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Solvents in Cleaners

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The Dow Chemical Company. CSPA Cleaning Products Fundamentals Seminar. Agenda ... CAAA lists 189 materials or classes of materials as HAPs. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Solvents in Cleaners


1
Solvents in Cleaners
  • Albert F. Joseph
  • The Dow Chemical Company

Source of photos and data for graphs is
Dow unless otherwise noted
2
Agenda
  • Role of a solvent in cleaning formulations
  • Household Cleaners (Hard Surface, Glass, Floor)
  • How do you choose and evaluate a solvent
  • Tools for solvent selection
  • Regulatory comments

3
Abbreviations
  • IPA - Isopropyl alcohol
  • ETOH - Ethanol
  • PG - Propylene glycol
  • MEK - Methyl ethyl ketone
  • 1,1,1-Tri - 1,1,1-trichloroethylene
  • PM - Propylene glycol methyl ether
  • DPM - Dipropylene glycol methyl ether
  • TPM - Tripropylene glycol methyl ether
  • PnB - Propylene glycol butyl ether
  • DPnB - Dirpropylene glycol butyl ether
  • PnP - Propylene glycol propyl ether
  • DPnP - Dipropylene glycol propyl ether
  • EB - Ethylene glycol butyl ether
  • DB - Diethylene glycol butyl ether
  • EHEX - Ethylene glycol hexyl ether
  • EPh - Ethylene glycol phenyl ether
  • PPh - Propylene glycol phenyl ether

4
Solvents in Cleaners
5
Role of Solvents in Cleaners
  • Solvency Power (solubilize soils, fragrance)
  • Coupling Ability (couple soils)
  • Reduce Surface Tension (wetting)
  • Evaporation Rate
  • Penetrate grease
  • Lower soil viscosity
  • Modify soil substrate (open pores, alter surface)
  • Formulation stability

6
Role of Solvent in Cleaning
7
Removing Elbow Grease
Mechanical Energy
ME with Interfacial Tension Reduction
ME with Viscosity Reduction
8
Solvent Properties Important to Formulators
  • Efficacy
  • Flash point (flammability)
  • Evaporation rate
  • Water solubility
  • Odor
  • Biodegradability
  • Cost

9
Household Cleaners
  • Applications
  • Hard surface
  • Glass
  • Floor
  • Solvents Used
  • Glycol Ethers
  • Alcohols
  • Amines
  • Other (terpenes, pine oil, hydrocarbons)

Household cleaners account for about 5 of total
industry demand for solvents
10
Percent Formulations by Solvent Type1
1 - Advanced Cleaning product formulations, E.W.
Flick
11
Role of Solvent in Household Cleaning
  • Solvency
  • Coupling ability
  • Surface tension reduction
  • Evaporation control
  • Clarity (homogeneity)
  • Soil viscosity reduction

12
Glycol Ethers
CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-O-CH2-CH-OH CH3
Hydrophobe
Hydrophile
  • Interfacially active
  • Varying water solubility
  • Solvency
  • Coupling ability

13
Aqueous Surface Tension of Glycol Ethers
HLB
14
Surface Tension Reduction(Floor Tile)
0 Glycol Ether (Retracts after mechanical
spreading)
4 Propylene glycol propyl ether (Maintains shape
upon mechanical spreading)
15
Other Solvents in Household
  • Amines
  • Soil surface modification
  • pH modification
  • Alcohols
  • Evaporation control (glass cleaners)
  • Preservation
  • Clarity
  • Natural solvents
  • d-limonene
  • Pine oils
  • Hydrocarbons
  • Solvency

16
General Formulation Questions
  • What is your application?
  • What is the role of the solvent? (reduce surface
    tension, solubilize other components, coupling or
    solubilizing of soil, etc.)
  • Does the solvent need to have water solubility?
  • What evaporation rate are you looking for?
  • Do you have safety, environmental or regulatory
    concerns?

17
How I clean will affect solvent choice...
  • Spray fast evaporation
  • Bucket-dilutable/concentrate 100 water
    soluble
  • Heavy greases hydrophobic

18
How do I determine cleaning performance
Performance Evaluation for aTypical All-Purpose
Cleaner
  • Scrubbing test
  • Substrates floor tile, ceramic tile, metal,
    painted wall board
  • Soil hydrophobic, particulates, sebum, soap
    scum
  • Cleaner application sponge, brush, number of
    strokes, soak/no soak
  • Results evaluation reflectance, visual grading,
    strokes to clean, streaking/filming
  • Compare to a standard

19
Cleaning Performance Comparison
Formulation without solvent and surfactants
Formulation surfactants
Formulation surfactants EB
Formulation surfactants DPnB
20
Cleaning Performance Comparison
21
Effect of Non-Ionic Surfactant Type (1) and
Solvent Type (4) on Cleaning Performance for a
APC Cleaner
22
Tools for Solvent Selection
  • HLB values
  • Water solubility vs. temperature
  • Hansen solubility parameter modeling
  • Coupling ability
  • Physical properties
  • Evaporation rate
  • Viscosity
  • Surface tension

23
Relative Solubility Hydrophile/Lipophile Balance
(HLB)
Hydrocarbons lt Glycol Ethers lt
Lower Alcohols
24
General Glycol Ether Characteristics
Note Trends for E-series are the same except
for water solubility
25
Water Solubility vs. Temperature
HLB
26
Coupling Performance
27
Lower AlcoholsProperties
All three alcohols are completely soluble in
water at room temperature. Methanol is the most
hydrophilic.
28
Lower AlcoholsApplications
Source http//householdproducts.nlm.nih.gov/ingr
edients.htm
29
Solubility ParametersHansen Theory
  • Three parameters Dispersive (D), Polar (P),
    and Hydrogen Bonding (H)
  • Solubility occurs when solvent solubility
    parameters match those of soil
  • Three dimensional plots used to show differences
    between the soils and solvents
  • Can become complicated when dealing with multiple
    solvents and/or multiple soils
  • Computer modeling tools are available

30
Solubility ParametersSimple Example
Which solvent should be selected for each soil?
31
A Brief Legislative Overview
  • The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
  • - Title I Volatile Organic Compounds(VOC)
  • - Title III Hazardous Air Pollutants(HAPs)
  • CAAA lists 189 materials or classes of materials
    as HAPs. Many solvents used in HI cleaners,
    including ethylene glycol-based glycol ethers and
    methanol appear on the HAPs list.
  • Always check the latest list. For example,
    ethylene glycol butyl ether has recently been
    de-listed.
  • Title 17 of The California Code of Regulations
  • - California Air Resources Board VOC Limits for
    Some Consumer Cleaning Products

32
California Legislation for Consumer Products
  • Proposes VOC limits for 24 classes of consumer
    products
  • - Bathroom and floor cleaners (7 VOC)
  • - Oven degreasers (8 VOC)
  • - Cooking sprays (18 VOC)
  • - Deodorants (10 VOC)
  • - Furniture polish (25 VOC)
  • - Glass Cleaners (8 VOC)
  • - Shaving cream (5 VOC)
  • - General Purpose Cleaners (10 VOC)
  • Solvents with a vapor pressure lt 0.1 mmHg _at_20
    deg.C
  • are not considered VOC
  • Exemptions
  • - Negligibly reactive compounds, such as
    acetone
  • - Certain fragrances
  • Note This list was prepared August, 2005. It
    can and does get modified. For example, the
    number of classes is changing to 131.

33
Photochemical Reactivity
  • VOC molecules react at different rates to create
    ground level ozone
  • Not all solvents contribute equally to ozone
    formation
  • Alkenes gt Aromatics gt Aliphatics / Oxygenated
  • Mass-based limits provide no differentiation with
    regard to the properties of different types of
    solvents
  • The same mass-based VOC content could mean very
    different ozone creation potential depending on
    which solvent is used
  • Majority of hydrocarbon and oxygenated solvents
    are treated the same - not a science based
    approach
  • Photochemical reactivity offers a viable science
    based approach
  • Leads to a higher reduction in ozone creation
    potential
  • Increases formulation flexibility
  • Maintains/improves coating performance

34
EPA Sets Direction for Future VOC Control
  • EPA has updated its VOC policies through
    publication of an interim policy statement
    reactivity is the key element
  • The new reactivity-based guidance from EPA allows
    regulators to achieve ozone reduction objectives
    more efficiently than by traditional mass-based
    limits

35
Additional VOC Comments
  • Canada currently only has guidelines
  • Guidelines are essentially equivalent to the US
    EPA National Rule
  • Surveys of consumer products are being conducted
  • Preparing for mandatory rules

36
Solvents in CleanersSummary
  • Play important roles in cleaners
  • Available with a variety of chemistries,
    properties, and features
  • Selection depends on the application and the role
    it is expected to play
  • Compliment other formulation components
  • Always consider potential safety and
    environmental concerns

37
Abbreviations
  • IPA - Isopropyl alcohol
  • ETOH - Ethanol
  • PG - Propylene glycol
  • MEK - Methyl ethyl ketone
  • 1,1,1-Tri - 1,1,1-trichloroethylene
  • PM - Propylene glycol methyl ether
  • DPM - Dipropylene glycol methyl ether
  • TPM - Tripropylene glycol methyl ether
  • PnB - Propylene glycol butyl ether
  • DPnB - Dirpropylene glycol butyl ether
  • PnP - Propylene glycol propyl ether
  • DPnP - Dipropylene glycol propyl ether
  • EB - Ethylene glycol butyl ether
  • DB - Diethylene glycol butyl ether
  • EHEX - Ethylene glycol hexyl ether
  • EPh - Ethylene glycol phenyl ether
  • PPh - Propylene glycol phenyl ether
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