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Nonionic Surfactants

Low-foam alcohol ethoxylates and polysorbate emulsifiers for machine dishwash, CIP, and all-purpose cleaners u2014 the hard-water-tolerant grease-cutters of cleaning chemistry.

Overview

Nonionic surfactants are uncharged surface-active agents whose water solubilityncomes from polyethylene-glycol (ethoxylate) chains rather than an ionic head. They arenthe low-foam grease-cutters of cleaning chemistry u2014 the default for automatic dishwash,nclean-in-place (CIP) circuits, and spray-wash systems where foam would break the process.nAlcohol ethoxylates do most of this work; polysorbates serve as emulsifiers and solubilizers.

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A defining property is the cloud point: a nonionic surfactant cleans best near the temperaturenwhere it begins to lose water solubility, but heating past that point makes it phase-separate andndrop out of solution. Match the cloud point to your wash temperature, and confirm it for the gradenyou buy. Their second advantage is hard-water tolerance; unlike anionics, nonionics are largelynunaffected by calcium and magnesium.

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Because nonionics are weaker on particulate soil than anionic detergents, most all-purpose andnlaundry formulas blend the two: nonionic for grease and oily soil, anionic for foam andnparticulates. Polysorbate 80 and polysorbate 20 are food-grade-available emulsifiers used to carrynfragrance and oily actives into aqueous cleaners; a castor-oil ethoxylate (PEG-40 castor oil) is annalternative fragrance solubilizer.

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Where it's used
  • Low-foam automatic dishwash and rinse aids
  • Clean-in-place (CIP) and spray-wash systems where foam must stay low
  • All-purpose and degreasing cleaners (grease and oily-soil removal)
  • Fragrance and oily-active solubilization in liquid cleaners (polysorbates)
  • Emulsification in blended anionic/nonionic detergent systems
Frequently asked questions
Why use a nonionic surfactant instead of an anionic one?
Nonionic surfactants foam very little and keep cleaning in hard water, which makes them the right choice for automatic dishwash, CIP, and spray systems where foam disrupts the process. Anionics out-clean them on particulate soil, so many formulas blend both.
What is the cloud point and why does it matter?
The cloud point is the temperature at which a nonionic surfactant loses water solubility and the solution turns cloudy. Cleaning is strongest just below it; above it the surfactant separates out. Match the cloud point to your operating temperature.
What do polysorbates do in a cleaner?
Polysorbate 80 and polysorbate 20 are nonionic emulsifiers that carry fragrance oils and other oily ingredients into a water-based cleaner so the product stays clear and stable on the shelf.
Does RawSource supply nonionic surfactants in bulk?
Yes. RawSource sources alcohol ethoxylates, polysorbate 20 and 80, and castor-oil ethoxylate solubilizers in drums, totes, and IBCs with CAS, SDS, TDS, and CoA. Send a bulk RFQ with your target cloud point or HLB and volume.
Disclaimer. Information on this page is provided for general reference and compiled from authoritative public sources (e.g. PubChem/ECHA). Values are typical and are not a guaranteed specification; the Certificate of Analysis (CoA) for the lot you purchase governs. Products are sold for industrial and professional use only. Nothing here is a medical, health, or efficacy claim. Always consult the current Safety Data Sheet (SDS) before handling, and confirm regulatory status, classification, and suitability for your application and jurisdiction.
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