What is Encap……let’s get technical

Understanding Surround Encapsulation Function - Encapsulation 101

With the Surround formula, detergent molecules in water will form micelles that rapidly emulsify oily phase soils and suspend the often times oil covered particulate soils in the cleaning solution. You can read more about micelles further down in this article. Our chemistry is uniquely designed to lower the surface tension of the water rapidly and efficiently so that the cleaning phase happens faster. Once the soils are emulsified and suspended they can easy be removed using an absorbent pad and/ or left in place to be removed by future routine vacuuming.

As Surround’s residual chemistry dries, the suspended and emulsified soils along with the detergent molecules become locked inside of our unique polymeric structure. Think of the glaze on a donut. The action of the chemistry plus the scrubbing of the pad and/ or bonnet, breaks the soils in sometimes-smaller particles and separates the soils or foreign substances from the fibre giving you the instant clean look while suspending them in our encapsulating polymer. Once the detergent, along with the soils are locked in our polymeric structure the detergent molecules “quit” cleaning, preventing rapid re soiling.

The polymeric structure is a relatively brittle film that will not allow the residual soils to reattach to the fibre surface due to their hardness and low surface tension. This is what also eliminates wicking in most situations. We have chosen to use a more durable hard film. It will not instantly sheer or break off like other formulas. This more durable hard polymer also reduces or eliminates any chance of air borne particulate issues and provides longer protection from particulate soil. All while allowing residual soils and the polymeric encapsulant to be removed by routine vacuuming.

Surround initially adheres to the carpet as a film, but under stress or external forces such as vacuuming, foot traffic, and or fibre flexing Surround encapsulating film will break away or shatter allowing the encapsulated soil to be removed. Surround will not just fall off of the carpet like in the glass trick so many companies use. It must be taken off of the carpet thusly holding the encapsulated soil more securely in our more durable hard polymer film. We feel that if the encap would just fall off and self shatter that it may also release the soil back into the carpet. Remember we want the encapsulated soil to stay encapsulated.

Carpets will appear to get even cleaner over the first few cycles of vacuuming as the residual soil is released and more light can penetrate the fibre surface. A very thin layer of the polymeric material is left behind on the fibre surface and will continue to protect the fibre long after the initial cleaning and over many cycles of further routine vacuuming. When the thin nearly monolayer film is finally removed over time the carpet will begin to re soil at the same rate as if it had never been cleaned. Surround is also unique as our chemistry will “rewet” and allow itself to be wet cleaned away during subsequent cleanings preventing any build up of the chemistry.

Micelle

A micelle is an aggregate of surfactant molecules dispersed in a liquid colloid. A typical micelle in an aqueous solution forms an aggregate with the hydrophilic “head” regions in contact with the surrounding solvent, sequestering the hydrophobic tail regions in the micelle centre. The shape and size of the micelle is a function of the molecular geometry of its surfactant molecules and the solution conditions such as surfactant concentration, temperature, ph and ionic strength.

Application

When surfactants are present above the CMC critical micelle concentration they can act as emulsifiers that will solubilise a compound normally insoluble in the solution being used. This occurs because the insoluble species can be incorporated into the micelle core, which is itself solubilised in the bulk solution by virtue of the head group’s favourable interactions with the solution’s species. The most common example of this phenomenon is detergents, which clean poorly soluble hydrophobic material such as oil, grease or dirt that cannot be cleaned by water alone. Detergents also help clean by lowering the surface tension of water making it easier to remove dirt from the fibre surface. The emulsifying ability of surfactants is also the basis for emulsion polymerization.

Surround will stay usable when mixed with water for a week or more. Some encaps when mixed with water will go sour or rancid after just a couple days making the mixed solution unusable thus wasting money. It not only has a great cleaning strength and smells great, there is no coughing when using this product.

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Encapsulation – A Sustainable Cleaning Method