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AU594058B2 - Laundry soil and stain remover - Google Patents
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AU594058B2 - Laundry soil and stain remover - Google Patents

Laundry soil and stain remover Download PDF

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Publication number
AU594058B2
AU594058B2 AU58374/86A AU5837486A AU594058B2 AU 594058 B2 AU594058 B2 AU 594058B2 AU 58374/86 A AU58374/86 A AU 58374/86A AU 5837486 A AU5837486 A AU 5837486A AU 594058 B2 AU594058 B2 AU 594058B2
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Australia
Prior art keywords
composition
surfactant
range
composition according
enzyme
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Application number
AU58374/86A
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AU5837486A (en
Inventor
Wayne Albert Kester
John Stephen Sabol Jr.
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Reckitt Benckiser LLC
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DowBrands Inc
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Publication of AU5837486A publication Critical patent/AU5837486A/en
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Publication of AU594058B2 publication Critical patent/AU594058B2/en
Assigned to S.C. JOHNSON & SON, INC. reassignment S.C. JOHNSON & SON, INC. Alteration of Name(s) in Register under S187 Assignors: DOWBRANDS INC.
Assigned to RECKITT & COLMAN INC. reassignment RECKITT & COLMAN INC. Alteration of Name(s) in Register under S187 Assignors: S.C. JOHNSON & SON, INC.
Assigned to RECKITT BENCKISER INC. reassignment RECKITT BENCKISER INC. Alteration of Name(s) in Register under S187 Assignors: RECKITT & COLMAN INC.
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • C11D3/38609Protease or amylase in solid compositions only
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D17/00Detergent materials or soaps characterised by their shape or physical properties
    • C11D17/0047Detergents in the form of bars or tablets
    • C11D17/0052Cast detergent compositions
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S424/00Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions
    • Y10S424/05Stick

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Oil, Petroleum & Natural Gas (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Detergent Compositions (AREA)

Description

Note: NO legalization or other witness required 51t~ PHILLIPS ORMON DE AND FITZPATRICK Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys 367 Collins Street Melbourne, Australia AUSTRALIA -1ATs~ Patents Act JO 1936~ COMPLETE SPECIFICATION
(ORIGINAL)
Class Int. Class Application Number: 1 5 6Z 4-6 Lodged: Complete Specification Lodged: Accepted: Published: 'Priority 711is doc:ument containg thre nomrdnients made under Setion 49 and is corsect for Related Art: ~Name(s) of Applicant(s): APPLICANT'S REF.: DOW Case 33,939A-F 1L44 TIHE DOW CHEM-iCALn COD' C 2030Q Dow ROODe 1LLE~~~ Address(es) of Applicant Abbott:: Roadbr ()ek(c ik- Actual Inventor(s): John Stephen Sabol, Jr.
Wayne Albert Kester Address for Service is: PHiLLIPS, ORMONDE AND FITZPATRICK Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys 367 Collins Street Melbodrne, Australia, 3000 Complete Specification for the invention entitled: LAUNDRY SOIL AND STAIN REMOVER The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to applicant(s): P19/i/84 October 1988 P18/7/78 PHILLIPS ORMONDE FITZPATRICK Patent and Trade Mark Attorneys 367 Collins Street Melbourne, Australia 1. I
-LA-
LAUNDRY SOIL AND STAIN REMOVER f 00 000 I a 0 0 0 00* o 0 O 00a e 0 0 0 00o 0:a n e o *000 Sooo o o Sf. f 00 0* 9 0 The present invention relates to a solid type fabric-cleaning product which finds utility as a pre- -applied spotting agent used prior to a laundering procedure so as to facilitate the removal .of stains and 5 soil from selected pre-treated areas of the fabric.
More particularly, the invention is directed to a laundry soil and stain removing composition which includes, in combination, surfactants, laundry enzymes, and a carrier material so as to provide a.solid medium 10 that can be applied conveniently to a fabric as an aid in laundering. The composition includes a chemical agent for regulating and for selectively, independently modifying physical and chemical parameters of the product to enhance its functional features and its effectiveness in use.
Compositions finding utility as pre-spotting preparations have long been utilized in the laundering and cleaning field. Such preparations have been applied to particular, selected stained or excessively soiled I 1 33,939A-F -2areas of clothing and other fabrics prior to subjecting the pre-treated material to a laundering operation.
It has been established that effective pre-treatment of the type described increases the likelihood of removing the soils and stains effectively.
The specialized preparations of the prior art have taken various physical forms and have embraced a broad variety of chemical formulations.
Among such pre-treatment preparations are dry products r <I which have ordinarily been used in conjunction with trr water to provide a solution in which the fabric to ri, be cleaned is.subjected to a pre-soaking step. Other prior products include formulations packaged for spraying from aerosol type dispensers or from bottles fitted with pump mechanisms. Still other specialized preparations constitute preparations which are applied, as liquid pre-spotters, directly to the area to be treated..
Some of the products of the type referred to above have included laundry enzymes of the type which have been demonstrated to act effectively to enhance the removal of foreign material including oil and grease stains and other stains and soil from fabrics.
The enzyme systems employed are critically sensitive to the pH .of the system into which, they.are introduced.
This fact has interfered with and impaired their use in laundry preparations. 1 The use of dry powders in conjunction with water is inconvenient, as is the use of liquid prespotters.
33,939A-F -2r- -3- Aerosol type pre-spotting preparations are costly and suffer the disadvantages inherent in all aerosol type products.
Another shortcoming of prior art "stain sticks" or pre-spotters, particularly those using a sodium stearate matrix, is that it has heretofore I not been possible to formulate a product which is soft but which also has a dropping point above 48.90C a temperature reasonably to be encountered during S. 10 shipment or warehouse storage.
Many of the products heretofore produced have failed to achieve a balance and functional optimization of the values of interrelated paraeters which define and determine the utility and the effectiveness of laundry pre-spotting preparations.
It is also known in the prior art to utilize pre-spotters which take the physical form of stick-like probes or applicators. It is to the improvement of the latter type of product and to the elimination of shortcomings and inadequacies of S prior art products that the present invention is p directed.
.This invention provid4 i a laundry soil and stain remover composition which takes the cyal form of an applicator stick with improve ysical and chemical properties and whi c'ay conveniently be used to apply preferespot removing and stain removing formul ns of the invention to selected areas o ric, prior to subjecting the fabric to a ih ering npg r;it-i nn 0 3,939-F -3- I 1 According to the present invention there is provided a laundry soil and stain remover composition in applicator stick form for application to fabric as an aid in I laundering, said composition comprising a laundry enzyme, a surfactant, a bodying agent constituting a gelling carrier vehicle for said enzyme and surfactant, said enzyme and surfactant being intimately and uniformly dispersed throughout said carrier to provide a physically self-sustaining solid for direct positive application and material transfer to selectable zones of fabric-s to be treated, prior to subjecting the fabrics to a laundering cycle, said composition having a pH in the range of from 9.3 to 9.8 to ensure effective enzyme activity, a dropping point in the range of from 37.8°C to 82.20C, and melting in the range of from 40 C to 80 C and having a hardness in the range of 3 mm to 30 mm as measured by using r .an ASTM standard needle with no weight added, and a salt f incorporated into said stain removing composition for /selectively, controllably and independently modifying and 20 regulating specific values of physical and chemical parameters of said composition while maintaining the dropping point of said composition within said temperature range, maintaining the hardness of said composition within ^said range, and maintaining the melting range, said salt r t 25 being present in a concentration of from 1 to 4 percent by t e' weight in said composition and being other than said surfactant or said bodying agent.
Ce 1 t c t t f t c 3a -4 I- It is an important feature of the stain removing compositions of the invention that they include, in combination, a surfactant, and in preferred embodiments, a surfactant system,,containing both non-ionic and anionic surfactants, one or more laundry enzymes, a bodying agent in which the enzymes and the surfactant are homogeneously distributed, and a chemical agent for selectively and independently modifying the value of one or more physical and chemical parameters of the composition to enhance its operation.
It is a related feature of the invention that the preferred formulations of the invention have proven exceedingly effective to remove stains and soil from cotton fabrics as well as from "synthetics".
Still another very important feature of the invention is the incorporation of a salt into the composition, effectively and selectively -to modify a given parameter of the product so as to improve both its physical and its chemical properties and to render I the preparation more useful in its intended applications.
A feature of the invention is the discovery that there are critical relationships between the several distinct components of the compositions of the invention and that the concentration; of the I components significantly affect the rheology and other properties, including the "dropping point" of the product.
33, 939A-F -4- '4 Yet another feature of the invention is that the method of preparing the compositions of the invention includes the step of forming sodium stearate, in-situ, one benefit of this procedure being a significantly reduced cost for raw materials.
It is an important practical advantage of the.formulations of the invention that they may be applied as much as several days before subjecting the treated fabric to laundering, with no adverse 10 effects. (The requirement in prior art products that the fabrics so treated must be subjected to washing E ,immediately and the applied pre-spotter not be allowed to dry, has been removed).
t In accordance with the present invention the physical properties including the hardness of the final product are effectively controlled by adding a salt to the matrix to control the consistency of the product as well as to maintain the dropping point above 37.8C, preferably from 48.9°C to 65.6°C. There is provided a simple and highly effective way to raise the dropping point while at the same time decreasing the hardness of the product.
It is an important practical feature of the formulations of the invention that they have been found to function effectively in removing a broad spectrum of stains including milk, blood, ink, cocoa, and sugar, as well as grass soils, on cotton and synthetics.
33,939A-F S. I -6- The formulations of the present invention have the requisite physical strength in combination with the property of being soft enough to be transferred mechanically to the areas to be treated, so that the product may be readily handled and used conveniently, and effectively, and, at the same time, maintaining a physically stable form at the elevated .temperatur.es to which such products are exposed during shipment and storage.
t, 10 Other and further features, objects, and advantages of the compositions of the invention will be evident from the following description considered in conjunction with the claims and with the accompanying drawing in which Figure 1 is a graphic representation S 15 illustrating the inter-r.elationship between various parameters, including drop point, pH and hardness, of the compositions of the invention.
I V
S
In preferred embodiments, the aims of the present invention are achieved by formulating a highly effective and versatile cleaning concentrate in the form of a readily manipulable stick-like probe or applicator which includes, in combination, inorganic and organic salts, an enzyme system, a surfactant, the salts, enzymes, and the surfactant being uniformly and homogeneously distributed throughout a supporting matrix or carrier -to provide a relatively soft but readily handled rod facilitating the direct appli- t cation of the composition to selected areas of fabric to be treated. The physical consistency, hardness, softening temperature and the general rheology of the matrix of the product are controlled and adjusted through the addition of the salt or salts.
33,939A-F -6- L:il L-i r i BaaK ai ,f 1 7 The compositions of the invention exhibit the requisite values of parameters including adequate rigidity, strength, hardness and temperature sensitivity and stability as well as requisite physical transferability, upon abrasive contact, to the fabric to which the composition is to be applied. Additionally, chemical propert; s, including the pH, are controlled to ensure an environment in which the enzymes present in the product can perform effectively.
The present invention invokes a unique combination of a system of laundry enzymes in conjunction with, preferably, two or more different types of detergents which augment and supplement one another, all contained as intimately and homogeneously S' 15 dispersed elements in a .carrier medium which includes added salt or salts to provide control over those physical properties and characteristics which ensure stability in shipment and storage and which also make it easy to handle the product physically and to apply the composition of the invention to selected areas which have been delineated for pre-treatment in advance of a laundering operation.
Preferred formulations of the laundry soil and stain remover products of the invention include, as fluid components or solvents in the matrix system, :propylene glycol and dipropylene glycol and mixtures of the two. In accordance with the'practice of the present invention, the relative ratio and concentrations of the glycols may be selected to alter and define the rheology of the matrix. The dimer produces a harder matrix than does propylene glycol, and the trimer, even harder products. The glycols can be 33,939A-F -7- -8blended to produce products with desired theological properties.
In formulations of the type referred to, salts, particularly borate and formate salts sodium borate decahydrate) were added for the purpose of enhancing enzyme stability. In the course of this research, the surprising.and unexpected discovery was made that these salts and other organic and inorganic salts could be used to control the consistency of the matrix of the product. Upon further research in this area of investigation it was discovered that the value of important parameters, for example, temperature 0 benided to producf the products ithcould also be varied and f controlled.g e stability the added salt components could be used effectively to control the pH in the formulated product.
o o In accordance with the practice of the present 0l rinvention the addition of the salts is effective not I t only to raise the drop point and decrease the hardness of the product, but also to increase the hardness, a15 nents couldthe udroped effectively to control the pH raisin the formulated product.
While hardness and drop point may be increased by using more stearic acid and more sodium hydroxide solutions (50% NaOH), the effect is to increase the pH.
Such increase is undesirable if there is a pH-sensitive component in the composition. For example, too elevated a pH has an adverse effect on enzyme systems. In the practice of the present invention it is practical, by the addition of a salt, to produce a "harder" formulation without the objectionable side effect of elevating the pH.
33,939A-F -8i In formulations of the type embodied herein, the final product is often translucent to opaque.
Accordingly, there may be some difficulty seeing where the product has been applied. The color of the product may also be undesirable or may not be consistent with the color one expects for a laundry product. To correct these features, one can add traditional coloring agents to the formulations. .Examples include titanium dioxide, pearlescent agents of the type traditionally used in the cosmetic and soap industry, various organic dyes of the type commonly used in laundry and detergent *products, and other coloring and opacifying agents t 'that would impart a color to the product, but which would not dye or discolor the fabric.
The traditional effect the changing of the sodium hydroxide concentration has on pH, hardness (Penetrometer reading), and drop point (temperature response) is shown in Table I and Figure 1. The 100 percent caustic point (Sample D in Table.I) represents the formulation listed below (Example The other data represent formulations in which the water/caustic ratio has been changed to give the desired amount of caustic. (See Table I).
S i 33,939A-F i-iii TABLE I SAMPLE
A
COMPOSITION
[H 0] 21.85 29.65 xs OH 20.90 30.60 xs OH 19.95 31.55 xs OH 19.00 32.5 18.05 33.45 less OH 17.1 34.40 (10% less OH 16.2 35.35 (15% less OH DROP Pt °C >93.3 58.0 53.5 51.3 48.1 44.5 45.9
PENETR
29 26 33 48 85 115 160
PH
10.12 10.09 9.96 9.89 9.41 9.29 8.99 t0
I
It 01 I Ito I II I: I rI *r
D
E
F
I
I
Figure 1 depicts schematically the variations and dependency as well as the inter-relationship between drop point, pH and penetrometer reading as a function of alkali concentration.
Example 1 04 .11 So0 a 00 0 Ingredient Propylene Glycol Nonylphenol Ethoxylate Linear Alcohol Ethoxylate Polyethylene glycol Dodecylbenzenesulfonic Acid Stearic Acid Enzyme Conc. (gms) 190.0 75.7 75.7 26.5 47.4 25.0 Water/caustic As shown in Table I As the graph of Figure 1 indicates, the formulation of Example 1 and other typical sodium stearate 33,939A-F incorporated into said stain removing compositiori for selectively, controllably and independently modifyin and regulating specific values of physical and' chemical parameters of said compositic'n while maintaining the 1 -11- formulations will have very unique properties. The pH, hardness, and drop point are all inter-related and are unique for each given formulation. The drop point of traditional stearate formulations cannot be changed without affecting the other two characteristics.
The present invention provides formulations and a methQd by which one.can change the drop point, for example, and not affect one or both of the other two properties, that is, hardness and pH. The unique utility of the invention is evident upon a consideration t of the following additional examples provided for illus- 't trative purposes.
Example 2 -The addition of 1 percent sodium chloride to the composition of Example 1 gives a drop point of 54.4 0 C, a pH of 9.35, and a penetrometer reading of The "comparable" sodium stearate formulation (Example 1) has a drop point of 50.8 0 C, a pH of 9.36, and a penetrometer reading of 54.
In the salt-modified Example 2 formulation, the drop point has been raised without significantly changing the other characteristics or the values of other input and parameters. In referring to the graph, it will be noted that a sodium stearate formulation with a drop point of 54.4°C would have a pH of and a penetrometer reading of 35. This formulation would be difficult to rub onto the fabric due to its hardness and the pH would be above the optimum for an enzyme, which is generally recognized as being a pH of no higher than 33, 939A-F -11- -12- Example 3 If one desires a product thatis softer, for example, a penetrometer reading of 110, the graph of Figure 1 indicates that the pH of this formulation would be 9.35 and the drop point would be 45 0 C. The pH of this formulation is within the optimum range for an enzyme, but the dropping point is below the preferred minimum of 48.9 0 C. The addition of 3 percent, sodium borate decahydrate to the formulation, for example, gives the desired product.
Example 4 r Ts Another example of the utility of this 4' ;r Sinvention is illustrated with a formulation that would be harder than the formulation illustrated in the previous two examples. If one desires a stick with a penetrometer reading of 38, the graph and Figure 1 indicates that the stearate formulation with that hardness would have a pH of 9.9 and a drop point of 50.6 0 C. In this example, the dropping point is above the target of 48.9 0 C, but the pH is above the optimum of 9.5. The addition of 3 percent sodium acetate would give a stick with the desired hardness and pH.
Detergent builders can be added to the presp.otter stick formulations. A general class of builders or chelants known 'as polyaminocarboxylic acids are useful for this function. Examples include sodium nitrillotriacetic acid and hydroxyethyldiaminotriacetic acid.
Citric acid and its salts as well as polyacrylic acids can also be utilized for this purpose. The builder is included in the formulations in concentrations from 0.01 to 10 percent.
33,939A-F -12- The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to applicant(s): P19/3/84 -13- The utilization of particular salts according to the teachings of this invention is particularly efficacious when builders are incorporated into the formulation. Without the addition of the salts of the invention, the builders have a tendency to crystallize in the matrix. In substituting a more soluble salt of the builder, such as substituting potassium citrate.for sodium.citrate, the.properties of the stick are altered such that the matrix does not have the desired hardness and dropping point.
However, the addition of a salt, in accordance with o the method of the present invention, will give the I t desired product.
The products of the invention are waxy, I 15 greasy, translucent to opaque solids with a dropping point of, advantageously, 37.8 0 C to 82.20C.
.A very extonsive group ef calts can be usodin practicing the invention. These salts include th salts of both organic and inorganic acids. Exam es are chloride, sulfate, carbonate, phosphate, romide, formate, acetate, tartrate, borate, and taborate as the anions, with the cations bei sodium, potassium, calcium, lithium, magnesium, an aluminum. This list is meant to be represe ative and not to exclude' other known salts.
Refe ng now more particularly to the surfactant ystem, in one preferred embodiment of the in ntion the surfactants include anionics, i articular, linear alkylbenzene sulfonates, for ,9example, o i inPl h-3n nnp~ 1f1 nn Thc p ,939A-F -13- 33,939A-F -1- Also, the products of the invention are waxy, translucent to opaque solids melting in the range of 40-80 0
C.
A very extensive group of salts can be used in practicing the invention. These salts include the salts of both organic and inorganic acids. Examples are chloride, sulfate, carbonate, phosphate, bromide, formate, acetate, tartrate, borate, and metaborate as the anions, with the cations being sodium, potassium, calcium, lithium, magnesium, and aluminum. This list is meant to be representative and not to exclude other known salts.
Referring now more particularly to the surfactant system, in one preferred embodiment of the invention the surfactants include anionics, in particular, linear alkylbenzene sulfonates, for example, sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate. These a,0e Sae a o e 21 4 a a *o a Sa -13a- 33,939A-F -2- -14anionic surfactants function more effectively than do the non-ionics in removing soil and stain from cotton fabrics.
Preferred non-ionic surfactants include ethoxylated linear alcohols, ethoxylated alkylphenols (preferably C 6
-C
12 alkylphenols), and polyethylene glycols.
Within the teachings of the invention, different surfactants may be substituted in the compositions. For example, surfactants of the non-ionic 10 type include ethoxylated linear alcohols, ethoxylated alkylphenols, and polyethylene glycols. Propylene glycol, including the mono, di, and tri anologs, may Ir be used. Various types of stearic acids including single, double and triple pressed stearic acid are suitable. The enzymes used include protease, lipase and amylase, in a stabilized blend, or as unstabilized preparations with calcium salts added for stabilization.
The efficacy and effectiveness of the product has been conclusively demonstrated using test preharations, EMPA-116 (blood, milk, ink), EMPA-112 (cocoa, milk, sugar), and grass soils, on cotton. The swatches were washed Sin 150 ppm hardness water at 37.8 0 C, with 100 cycles per minute agitation, and 1.5 g/l non-phosphate powdered commercial detergent Tide The test swatches were then read on a Hunter Reflectometer, using the L scale, where L is an indication of lightness-darkness.
33,939A-F -14- 939A-F 91" 33,939A-F -3-
PRODUCT
TIDE®
CLOROX -2
SHOUT
PRODUCT OF THE
INVENTION
EMPA-112*
(STAIN)
7.0 9.2 13.1 19.2 EMPA-116*
(STAIN)
28.0 56.3 56.2 107.0
GRASS*
(STAIN)
7.1 15.5 9.9 15.4 Remission Final Reading Initial Reading II 4I 4l 4 Il 4* 4 *4Z The present invention constitutes formulation and methods of controlling the consistency of the solid formulation and the dropping point in spotting sticks.
Current art teaches that there is a direct relationship between the dropping point and the hardness of the 15 formulation. That is to say that if one raises the dropping point, the hardness increases. The present invention discloses a technique for raising the dropping point and simultaneously decreasing the hardness of the formulation, an effect which is contrary to what is normally observed in sodium stearate formulations.
44 0 ft ac4 33,939A-F 3a -16- Conc. Operational (parts by Concentrational weight) Ranges (parts by weight) Stearic Acid 9.4 5-10 Dodecylbenzene Sulfonic Acid 5.2 3-20 Dipropylene Glycol 3.7 2-6 Propylene Glycol 33.7 20-50 Nonyl Phenol Ethoxylate 14.9 5-30 Linear Alcohol c, Ethoxylate 14.9 5-30 S 15 Polyethylene glycol 1.6 NAOH-50% 3.7 r' Enzyme 5.0 2-10 Sodium Borate S 20 Decahydrate 2.9 2-4 Fragrance 0.02 Water qs.
Example The two surfactants and the glycols are heated to 65.6 0 C with stirring, until solution takes place.
The polyethylene glycol is added next, followed by a water solution containing the sodium borate. When solution has take- place, the sodium hydroxide and sulfonic acid are added. This is followed by addition of the stearic acid. When the stearic acid has dissolved, the temperature 'is lowered'to approximately, 54.4 0 C, and the enzyme is added with stirring. The resulting formulation is poured into the appropriate mold-like containers or formers.
Products produced in accordance with the invention are characterized by an ASTM penetrometer hardness of 3 to 30 mm using the standard cone with no additional weight added.
33,939A-F -16-

Claims (2)

1. A laundry soil and stain remover composition in applicator stick form for application to fabric as an aid in laundering, said composi,:iun comprising a laundry enzyme, a surfactant, a bodying agent constituting a gelling carrier vehicle for said enzyme and surfactant, said enzyme and surfactant being intimately and uniformly dispersed throughout said carrier to provide a physically self-sustaining solid for direct positive application and material transfer to selectable zones of fabrics to be treated, prior to subjecting the fabrics to a laundering cycle, said composition having a pH in the range of from
9.3 to 9.8 to ensure effective enzyme activity, a dropping point in the range of from 37.8 C to 82.2°C, and melting in the range of from 40 C to 80 C and having a 'c hardness in the range of 3 mm to 30 mm as measured by using v an ASTM standard needle with no weight added, and a salt incorporated into said stain removing composition for selectively, controllably and independently modifying and regulating specific values of physical and chemical parameters of said composition while maintaining the dropping point of said composition within said temperature t^ range, maintaining the hardness of said composition within said range, and maintaining the melting range, said salt I being present in a concentration of from 1 to 4 percent by t t weight in said composition and being other than said surfactant or said bodying agent. o 2. A composition according to claim 1, wherein said salt includes at least one member selected from chloride, sulfate, carbonate, phosphate, bromide, formate, acetate, tartrate, borate or metaborate, and mixtures thereof as anions, and at least one member selected from sodium, potassium, calcium, lithium, magnesium and aluminum and mixtures thereof as cations. 3. A composition according to claims 1 or 2, wherein the carrier vehicle comprises sodium stearate generated in-situ within the composition. 17 i 33,939A-F -6- V-7 4. A composition according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the surfactant includes a linear alkyl benzenesulfonate. A composition according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the surfactant comprises sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate. 6. A composition according to claim 1 or claim 2, wnerein the surfactant includes linear alcohol ethoxylates, alkylphenol ethoxylates and polyethylene glycols wherein said carrier vehicle comprises sodium stearate. 7. A composition according to claim 1, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the accompanying Examples. a a a DATED: 8 DECEMBER 1989 PHILLIPS ORMONDE FITZPATRICK Attorneys for: A DOW CONSUMER PRODUCTS, INC. a an ac 6 a a .I 18
AU58374/86A 1985-06-07 1986-06-05 Laundry soil and stain remover Ceased AU594058B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US74262785A 1985-06-07 1985-06-07
US742627 1985-06-07
US85185786A 1986-04-14 1986-04-14
US851857 1986-04-14

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AU5837486A AU5837486A (en) 1986-12-11
AU594058B2 true AU594058B2 (en) 1990-03-01

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CA (1) CA1283613C (en)
DE (1) DE3684180D1 (en)
HK (1) HK22493A (en)
SG (1) SG124892G (en)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0318470A3 (en) * 1987-07-08 1991-01-30 Warwick International Group Plc Laundry composition and process for producing it
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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
HK22493A (en) 1993-03-19
DE3684180D1 (en) 1992-04-16
AU5837486A (en) 1986-12-11
EP0205999B1 (en) 1992-03-11
SG124892G (en) 1993-03-12
EP0205999A2 (en) 1986-12-30
CA1283613C (en) 1991-04-30
EP0205999A3 (en) 1988-07-06

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