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Designing a cold process pearlizer
Hello everyone,
This is more a concept experiment at this point before I put too much time into this to see if my rationale is correct/wrong. Basically, supplied cold process pearlizers are simple to use and produce immediate drastic effects. They also are comprised of relatively simple ingredients (glycol stearates/sles/water). When not using a cold process pearlizer during production the stearates have to be heated and cooled properly, taking a lot longer to produce the pearl effect and it is never quite the same brilliance.
This has me wondering if it would be possible to recreate this effect so it can be cold processed and have immediate results. The theory would be to heat and melt the stearate/sles in water then slowly cool. As it passed the melting temperature there should be a time zone before reaching the crystallization temperature in which the batch could be “seeded” with an amount of commercial mix. This seeding would hopefully provide the crystalline framework for nucleation of the remaining of the batch. Future batches could then be seeded from this previous stock as required. Hopefully the end result would be a visually identical pearlizer to the commercial blend.
Is there any fundamental flaw in this reasoning?
Thanks,
RDchemist15
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