Evaluation of shampoos includes visual assessment and measuring physicochemical properties such as pH, density, and viscosity. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a common detergent used in shampoos, though the concentration varies between brands and product lines. Cheap shampoos may contain high detergent concentrations while expensive shampoos contain little detergent. Shampoos for oily and dry hair may contain the same detergent at the same concentration, but shampoos for oily hair have less oil or conditioning agent. Quality control tests for shampoos include measuring clarity, foam production, pH, solid content, viscosity, dirt dispersion, cleaning action, surface tension, and detergency ability
Evaluation of shampoos includes visual assessment and measuring physicochemical properties such as pH, density, and viscosity. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a common detergent used in shampoos, though the concentration varies between brands and product lines. Cheap shampoos may contain high detergent concentrations while expensive shampoos contain little detergent. Shampoos for oily and dry hair may contain the same detergent at the same concentration, but shampoos for oily hair have less oil or conditioning agent. Quality control tests for shampoos include measuring clarity, foam production, pH, solid content, viscosity, dirt dispersion, cleaning action, surface tension, and detergency ability
Evaluation of shampoos includes visual assessment and measuring physicochemical properties such as pH, density, and viscosity. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a common detergent used in shampoos, though the concentration varies between brands and product lines. Cheap shampoos may contain high detergent concentrations while expensive shampoos contain little detergent. Shampoos for oily and dry hair may contain the same detergent at the same concentration, but shampoos for oily hair have less oil or conditioning agent. Quality control tests for shampoos include measuring clarity, foam production, pH, solid content, viscosity, dirt dispersion, cleaning action, surface tension, and detergency ability
Evaluation of shampoos includes visual assessment and measuring physicochemical properties such as pH, density, and viscosity. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a common detergent used in shampoos, though the concentration varies between brands and product lines. Cheap shampoos may contain high detergent concentrations while expensive shampoos contain little detergent. Shampoos for oily and dry hair may contain the same detergent at the same concentration, but shampoos for oily hair have less oil or conditioning agent. Quality control tests for shampoos include measuring clarity, foam production, pH, solid content, viscosity, dirt dispersion, cleaning action, surface tension, and detergency ability
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Evaluation of shampoos comprises the quality control tests
including visual assessment and physiochemical controls
such as pH, density and viscosity. Sodium lauryl sulfate based detergents are the most common but the concentration will vary considerably from brand to brand and even within a manufacturer's product range. Cheap shampoos may contain a high detergent concentration while expensive shampoos may contain very little of a cheap detergent1. Shampoos for oily hair can have exactly the same detergent at the same concentration as shampoos for dry hair. The difference is more likely to be a reduced amount of oil or conditioning agent in the shampoo for oily hair or the difference may even just be the packaging.
1. Physical appearance/visual inspection: The
formulations prepared were evaluated in terms of their clarity, foam producing ability and fluidity2
2. Determination of pH: The pH of 10% shampoo
solution in distilled water was determined at room temperature 25C3. 3. Determine percent of solids contents: A clean dry evaporating dish was weighed and added 4 grams of shampoo to the evaporating dish. The dish and shampoo was weighed. The exact weight of the shampoo was calculated only and put the evaporating dish with shampoo was placed on the hot plate until the liquid portion was evaporated. The weight of the shampoo only (solids) after drying was calculated. 4. Rheological evaluations: The viscosity of the shampoos was determined by using Brookfield Viscometer (Model DV-l Plus, LV, USA) set at different spindle speeds from 0.3 to 10 rpm3. The viscosity of the shampoos was measured by using spindle T95. The temperature and sample containers size was kept constants during the study. 5. Dirt dispersion: Two drops of shampoo were added in a large test tube contain 10 ml of distilled water. 1 drop of India ink was added; the test tube was stoppered and shakes it ten times. The amount of ink in the foam was estimated as None, Light, Moderate, or Heavy. 6. Cleaning action: 5 grams of wool yarn were placed in grease, after that it was placed in 200 ml. of water containing 1 gram of shampoo in a flask. Temperature of water was maintained at 350C. The flask was shaked for 4 minutes at the rate of 50 times a minute. The solution was removed and sample was taken out, dried and weighed. The amount of grease removed was calculated by using the following equation:
In which, DP is the percentage of detergency power,
C is the weight of sebum in the control sample and T is the weight of sebum in the test sample4. 7. Surface tension measurement: Measurements were carried out with a 10% shampoo dilution in distilled water at room temperature. Thoroughly clean the stalagmometer using chronic acid and purified water. Because surface tension is highly affected with grease or other lubricants5, 6. The data calculated by following equation given bellow: where W1 is weight of empty beaker. W2 is weight of beaker with distilled water. W3 is Weight of beaker with shampoo solution. n1 is no. of drops of distilled water. n2 is no. of drops of shampoo solution. R1 is surface tension of distilled water at room temperature. R2 is surface tension of shampoo solution. 8. Detergency ability: The Thompson method was used to evaluate the detergency ability of the samples. Briefly, a crumple of hair were washed with a 5% sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) solution, then dried and divided into 3g weight groups. The samples were suspended in a n-hexane solution containing 10% artificial sebum and the mixture was shaken for 15 minutes at room temperature. Then samples were removed, the solvent was evaporated at room temperature and their sebum content determined. In the next step, each sample was divided into two equal parts, one washed with 0.1 ml of the 10% test shampoo and the other considered as the negative control. After drying, the resided sebum on samples was extracted with 20 ml n-hexane and re-weighed. Finally, the percentage of detergency power was calculated using the following equation: In which, DP is the percentage of detergency power, C is the weight of sebum in the control sample and T is the weight of sebum in the test sample3, 4.