Best way to actually clean my glass shower door?
Best way to actually clean my glass shower door?
I could also be wrong, but I believe SDS has less ‘affinity’ for protons than acetic acid (which is part of the reason why detergents work so well). You’d need sulfuric acid, or something stronger, and removal from solution of its buddy ion sodium. Then I think you could protonate dodecyl sulfate.
Now acetic acid and soaps…yeah, far more likely to generate scum. The polar head is a weaker acid.
The importance of soap to human civilization is documented by history, but some problems associated with its use have been recognized. One of these is caused by the weak acidity (pKa ca. 4.9) of the fatty acids. Solutions of alkali metal soaps are slightly alkaline (pH 8 to 9) due to hydrolysis. If the pH of a soap solution is lowered by acidic contaminants, insoluble fatty acids precipitate and form a scum. A second problem is caused by the presence of calcium and magnesium salts in the water supply (hard water). These divalent cations cause aggregation of the micelles, which then deposit as a dirty scum.
These problems have been alleviated by the development of synthetic amphiphiles called detergents (or syndets). By using a much stronger acid for the polar head group, water solutions of the amphiphile are less sensitive to pH changes. Also the sulfonate functions used for virtually all anionic detergents confer greater solubility on micelles incorporating the alkaline earth cations found in hard water.
I came to say vinegar
It will clean it 100% without even the soap
I have a dumb question: why heat up the vinegar? Does it help with some kind of chemical reaction in the mixing or does heat just help to make the mixture to be more effective so it needs to be used before it cools down?
My apartment has incredibly hard water, so sinks, toilets, and showers always look rough. It just now occurred to me that maybe rain x on the glass after cleaning could be a decent preventative measure unless somebody can tell me why that’s a bad idea?
I absolutely assumed that this part is true, but I’m wondering if this is pretty useless after it’s cooled down or if it’s still okay to make a big batch and use it over a couple of months or however long it could last. There’s also the concern of mixing vinegar which is acidic with a soap which tends to be alkali. Idk what to expect chemically speaking, but then adding heat and agitation will certainly cause a more aggressive chemical reaction. I assume this won’t explode or produce toxic fumes or anything, but this might not be particularly shelf stable because it’s relying on the reaction from the mixing to do some scrubbing bubbles action on some of the challenging shit? Idk, I just hesitate to trust this sort of “life hack” type info because so much of it has proven to be anything ranging from useless bullshit to corporate astroturfing (buy Dawn!) to downright dangerous advice.
My hunch is that it probably works great for the first hour or so after mixing and then has immediate diminishing returns, so it’s probably best to make a small batch, immediately spray it on everything you want to hit with it, and then go back and wipe up in the order you sprayed this shit onto. But idk, I haven’t tried it, use at your own risk. Amateur chemistry has risks.
Fresh idea just for you: Car Wax.
Gonna apply it to a section of my shower tiles next time I clean.
There’s a product sold at auto parts stores that’s designed to clean side view mirrors of mineral buildup.
It comes with a little rough sponge and a white pasty goop you squeeze onto the sponge.
That’s the only thing I’ve found that works for getting mineral buildup off of glass.
Ok, thanks. I use white vinegar or lemon for cleaning and in the rinse cycle of laundry for softener/suds removal, organic acv (with the mother) and distilled water, sometimes a drop of honey as a hair rinse and occasional oral tonic/mouth rinse (or ginger, which is also great for upset stomach).
Boiled orange or lemon peel in the dish pan is great for sanitizing/spot prevention, but if I let dishes pile up long enough to run the dishwasher, a shallow dish of white vinegar goes in the bottom to replace rinse aid. It's economical and effective.
Apart from using something that can solve calcium and the likes:
Afterwards, don’t squeegee the water off, use something like this:
Use this, without any product, every time you finish to shower.