The invention relates to a method of selecting a polyether polysiloxane surfactant to optimise an alcohol and water containing foaming cleansing composition, and optimised foaming compositions, where the alcohol is C1-C4 straight or branched chain alcohol and the polyether is selected from a polyethylene oxide (PEO), polypropylene oxide (PPO), or a mixed PEO/PPO polyether.
Alcohol-containing cleansing skin compositions, such as those used as antibacterial and antiviral cleansing compositions are generally known in the art. Such cleansing compositions typically contain at least 50% volume of the alcohol. Those compositions containing 50% volume alcohol have some antibacterial properties, but are typically less effective at disinfecting viral particles. Typically, the minimum concentration used for personal hand cleansing compositions is 60% volume, to provide adequate antiviral activity. Typically, medical practitioners use formulations containing at least 70% volume alcohol.
One disadvantage of alcohol-containing formulations is that the alcohol often evaporates quickly from the skin. To address such a disadvantage, thickeners have previously been added to such disinfectant solutions in order to increase the viscosity of these agents. This produces disadvantages such as difficulty in dosing due to problems in distributing the thickened formulation evenly and uniformly across the skin or hands.
Production of foamable cleansing formulations using, for example, conventional non-alcohol-containing soaps, is generally known. One problem with simply adding a surfactant to an alcohol-containing formulation has been that the alcohol often inhibits the production of the foam. This requires careful selection of the surfactant in order to produce the desired foaming properties.
WO 2006/066888 and WO 2006/094387 describe high alcohol-containing foaming compositions which utilise silicone-based surfactants. Careful selection of the silicone-based surfactant allowed the alcohol-containing compositions to be foamed, for example using non-pressurised hand pumps.
WO 2006/066888 describes using a surfactant in combination with at least one polyalkylene glycol. The surfactant was selected to have a surface tension of +/−15 dyn/cm of the surface tension of the alcohol component of the formulation. A range of silicone compounds are described in the application, including linear and cyclic silicones and polysiloxane-polyether copolymers. The specially preferred polyether-polysiloxane surfactant is indicated as being a bis-PEG/PPG-20/20 dimethicone, that is a PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane) backbone of indeterminate length comprising a terminal PEO polyether with a number average of 20 residues and a terminal PPO polyether with a number average of 20 residues. This is stated to be used at concentrations between 60 wt % ethanol and 90 wt % ethanol.
WO 2006/09487 again describes the use of a C1-C4 alcohol in concentrations of at least 40% vol/vol of the total composition, in combination with a silicon-based surface active agent in an amount of at least 0.01% of the total composition and water in an amount to balance the total composition to 100%. A variety of silicon-based surfactants are suggested, including bis-PEG-[10-20] dimethicone, 3-(3-hydroxypropyl)-heptamethyltrisilioxane, ethoxylated silicon-based surfactants, bis-PEG/PPG 18/6 dimethicone, a polyether-modified polysiloxane or a polysiloxane betaine. These are suggested across the full range of the concentrations of alcohol described in that published application.
The interaction between siloxane surfactants and their foaming properties in ethanol-water solutions has proved to be complex. The Applicant sought to optimise the siloxane surfactants used within alcohol-containing cleansing formulations. They looked at a number of backbone lengths and polyether side chain lengths and compositions across a range of different alcohol concentrations. The reason for doing this was they found that different siloxanes have different properties, each of which affect whether, for example, the polysiloxane is insoluble in the ethanol-water formulation, whether the siloxane surfactant is able to foam, and whether the siloxane surfactant affects the push speed (speed at which air and the composition may be mixed in a pump-foamer dispenser) to produce the foam. This allows for example the user to develop a foaming formulation that would be robust to changes in the push speed in hand pump dispensers, so that it would not unduly suffer in performance if the pump speed were increased. This therefore allows the formulations to be used in different pumps from different manufacturers or allows for different pump speeds to be used by different end users.
The composition of the polyether chains was also found to affect the properties, depending on the concentration of the alcohol.
The Applicant has now been able to identify those polyether polysiloxanes to select to optimise the foaming of alcohol and water containing foam cleansing compositions for different alcohol formulations.
Accordingly, the invention provides a method of selecting a polyether polysiloxane surfactant to optimise an alcohol and water containing foaming cleansing composition comprising:
The degree of polymer polymerisation of the siloxane backbone means the number average of dimethyl siloxane residues within the backbone.
The degree of polymerisation of the polyether side groups is the number average of PEO and/or PPO residues in each side group attached to the polysiloxane backbone. PEO is also known as polyethylene glycol (PEG). PPO is also known as polypropylene glycol (PPG).
The predetermined calibration allows the polyether polysiloxane(s) to be optimised for a given concentration of the alcohol.
The alcohol may be, for example, methanol, ethanol, propanol, isopropanol or butanol, or mixtures thereof. Most typically the alcohol is ethanol, which may be provided as denatured alcohol. The formulation may comprise a mixture of the alcohols such as a mixture of ethanol and isopropanol. Typically, the formulation comprises at least 50% volume alcohol, 80% or 85% by volume alcohol and may comprise less than 90% volume alcohol. The formulation may comprise a number of additional additives, with water being used to 100% weight of the composition.
The polysiloxane backbone may comprise one or more polyether side groups, for example, 1-45 polyether side groups. Hence, for example, substantially all of the dimethyl siloxane monomers may comprise a polyether backbone. Alternatively, fewer dimethyl siloxane monomers may comprise a polyether backbone, or substantially more dimethyl siloxane monomers may not comprise a polyether backbone.
Typically, 1-20, 1-15, 1-10, 1-5, 1-4, 1-3 or 1 or 2 polyether side groups may be provided for each siloxane backbone.
Typically, the siloxane backbone has a degree of polymerisation (PDMSDP), or comprises 1-50, 2-45, 5-40, 10-30, 15-25 siloxane residues.
Most typically, each siloxane backbone comprises 1 or 2 polyether side groups.
More typically a linear block copolymer is used with one or more typically both ends of the PDMS backbone blocked with PEO and/or PPO, for example as a bis-dimethicone.
Most typically, the number of monomers in the siloxane backbone is between 8 and 45 residues.
The Applicant has unexpectedly identified that mixed PEO/PPO polyethers are preferential in those compositions containing lower amounts of alcohol. Accordingly, when the amount of alcohol is below 70% volume, mixed PEO/PPO polyethers are specially selected. These may be, for example, separate blocks of PEO and PPO as separate polyether side chains. Alternatively, the side chain may each comprise a mixture of PPO and PEO.
Typically, when the amount of alcohol is about 50-less than 70% volume:
Typically, when the amount of alcohol is 70-90% volume:
Polyether typically contains 12 monomers and the degree of polymerisation of the PDMS is 30-40.
A further aspect of the invention, when the degree of polymerisation of the polysiloxane backbone is at least 10, or more typically at least 20:
The minimum amount and degree of polymerisation are the number average for the polyether and polysiloxane
Typically, the final concentration comprises the alcohol, at least 0.01 wt % of the final composition of the polyether polysiloxane and water to balance the final composition to 100 wt %. Typically the total amount of the polyether polysiloxane is 1-10 wt %, more typically 5 wt %.
Typically, the composition is foamable when mixed with air at low pressure, for example, at atmospheric pressure or below, wherein when the composition is mixed with air, the mixture of the composition and air forms the foam. Foam dispensing pumps for producing foamed alcohol-water containing formulations are generally known in the art, and are obtainable from, for example, SC Johnson Professional Products Limited, Belper, Derbyshire, United Kingdom. Hand operated pumps, may be used or alternatively automated pumps for foaming the product at low pressure may also be used. The composition may comprise one or more additional surfactants selected from the group consisting of additional silicone-based surface active agents, fluorinated surfactants, alkylglucosides, poly(ethoxylated and/or propoxylated)alcohol, a poly(ethoxylated and/or propoxylated)ester, a derivative of a poly(ethoxylated and/or propoxylated)alcohol, a derivative of a poly(ethoxylated and/or propoxylated)ester, an alkyl alcohol, an alkenyl alcohol, an ester of a polyhydric alcohol, an ether of a polyhydric alcohol, an ester of a polyalkoxylated derivative of a polyhydric alcohol, an ether of a polyalkoxylated derivative of a polyhydric alcohol, a sorbitan fatty add ester, a polyalkoxylated derivative of a sorbitan fatty add ester, a betaine, a sulfobetaine, an imidazoline derivative, an aminoacid derivative, a lecithin, a phosphatide, an amine oxide, a sulfoxide and mixtures thereof, present in an amount between about 0.10% to about 5% weight percent.
The composition may comprise a foam stabiliser at typically between 0 and 5%, more typically 0.01 and 4 wt % of the final composition. The foamed stabilising agent may be selected from the group consisting of lactic acid esters of monoglycerides, cationic emulsifiers, anionic surfactants such as (sodium dodecyl sulphate), quaternary ammonium compounds, triquatemized stearic phospholipid complex, hydroxystearamide propyltriamine salts, lactic acid monoglycerides, food emulsifiers such as glyceryl monostearate, propylene glycol mon[omicron]stearate, sodium stearoyl lactylate, cetyl betaine, glycolether, n-propanol, butyleneglycol, siliconee wax, an encapsulated oil, Microcapsule Mineral Oil, and combinations thereof. The composition may further comprise one or more of a moisturizer, emollient, lipid layer enhancers and combinations thereof selected from the group consisting of lanolin, vinyl alcohol, polyvinyl pyrrolidone and polyols selected from the group consisting of glycerol, propylene glycol, butyleneglycol, glyceryl oleate and sorbitol, cocoglucoside, a fatty alcohol selected from the group consisting of cetyl alcohol, stearyl alcohol, lauryl alcohol, myristyl alcohol and palmityl alcohol, cetyl alcohol, ceteareth 20, an alkylglucoside, mixtures of alkylglucoside and glyceryl Linoleammonium Chloride or PEG-7 Glyceryl Cocoate, and combinations thereof, present in an amount up to about 5%. The pH of the formulation may be adjusted by using an acid or base to adjust the pH of the composition to a pre-selected pH utilising an acid or a base in an amount of to 5% by weight, more typically 0.05-0.5% weight of the total composition and may be citric acid.
The moisturiser may be provided at 0.1-5 wt %.
0.01-5 by wt % of the total composition may be preservative.
The composition may comprise further constituents selected from the group consisting of organic gums and colloids, lower alkanolamides of higher fatty acids, short chain dials and/or triols, fragrance, colouring matter, ultraviolet absorbers, solvents, suspending agents, buffers, conditioning agents, antioxidants, bactericides and medicinally active ingredients, and combinations thereof. The invention further provides compositions obtainable by a method according to the invention.
A still further aspect of the invention provides a foam cleansing composition comprising a polyether polysiloxane surfactant an alcohol and water, wherein the amount of alcohol is about 50-less than 70%% volume, the alcohol is a C1 to C4 straight or branched chain alcohol, mots typically ethanol, and the polyether is selected from a polyethylene oxide (PEO), polypropylene oxide (PPO) or a mixed PEO/PPO polyether; and
The composition typically contains 8 monomers per polyether chain and the PDMS is 10.
A still further aspect of the invention provides a foam cleansing composition comprising a polyether polysiloxane surfactant an alcohol and water, wherein the amount of alcohol is about 70-90% % volume, the alcohol is a C1 to C4 straight or branched chain alcohol, mots typically ethanol, and the polyether is selected from a polyethylene oxide (PEO), polypropylene oxide (PPO) or a mixed PEO/PPO polyether; and
Typically, the polyether contains 12 monomers and the PDMS is 30-40.
The compositions of the invention may comprise at least 0.01% of the final composition of the polyether polysiloxane and water to balance the composition to 100 wt % (including with the optional components as defined above for the methods of the invention).
Additional components include additional surfactants, foam stabilisers, moisturisers, emollients, lipid layer enhancers and combinations of, acid or bases, preservatives, and further constituents as discussed above for the methods of the invention. Compositions of the invention may be stored in an unpressurised dispenser having a dispenser pump for mixing the air composition with air and dispensing foam therefrom. Typically, the dispenser pump dispenses foam at atmospheric pressure or below.
Computer-implemented methods comprising inputting an amount of alcohol to be used in a composition and selecting a polyether polysiloxane surfactant to optimise an alcohol and water-containing foam cleansing composition by a method of the invention are also provided. The computer may comprise a computer processor and a computer memory.
The components of the compositions are all commercially available or are able to be manufactured by one skilled in the art without undue experimentation.
The invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the following Figures:
Methods & Experimental
Six triblock siloxane polyethers were investigated, featuring a range of DPPDMS (=10-45) and DPPolyether (=8 to 18 per arm). Two contained polypropylene oxide, or a mixture of polyethylene oxide and polypropylene oxide (A and B)—four had only polyethylene oxide (C-F). A further two siloxane-polyethylene oxide compounds were synthesised by the experimenters (G-H).
These surfactants were foamed by the automated depression of a lever on a commercial hand sanitizer dispenser, which mixed air (˜25 ml) and surfactant solution (1.5 ml) before ejecting them through a mesh. In each measure, the volume of four lever depressions was measured using a conical measuring cylinder and recorded.
Four variables were adjusted—the nature of the surfactant, the surfactant loading, the water-ethanol ratio in the solvent and the time over which the lever was depressed.
Where Ax represents a block of x repeat units of polyether whereas Bx represents a block of x repeat units of siloxane. Hence A10B10A10 describes a triblock siloxane polyether, containing one 10-unit block of siloxane, capped with two 10-unit blocks of poly(ethylene) oxide
The surfactants were foamed by the automated depression of a lever on a commercial hand sanitizer dispenser provided by SC Johnson Professional Ltd Denby, Derbyshire UK, which mixed air (˜25 ml) and surfactant solution (1.5 ml) before ejecting them through a mesh. In each measure, the volume of four lever depressions was measured using a conical measuring cylinder and recorded.
The resulting data was analysed by elastic net regression techniques, building a robust model which could be used to predict the foamability of novel siloxane polyether surfactants and determine the ideal surfactant for a given water-alcohol solution. AICC-based validation to reduce overfitting, and the data was assumed to follow a gamma distribution. All quadratic terms and second order interaction terms were included, except those that suffered from strong multicollinearity with other terms.
Results
Interactions between solvent quality and surfactant structure
A key feature of the model was the strength of interaction terms linking xeth, nPDMS and nPEther The model predicted that a narrow range of nPEther was required for good foamability. The optimal value was strongly dependent on nPDMS—with higher values of nPDMS requiring higher values of npEther The effect of nPDMS, on the other hand, was strongly dependent on xeth—when xeth was low, a low value of nPDMS was preferable, and the opposite when xeth was high (see
Influence of Surfactant Concentration
We found that concentration has an important (though marginally diminishing) positive effect on foamability. At the steepest point of the curve, an increase in surfactant concentration by 5 mM was expected to increase foam volume by ˜5 ml. The effect of concentration was moderated by both ethanol fraction and push speed—with higher ethanol content and longer foam generation times making the system more sensitive to concentration.
Influence of Foam Generation Time
The direct effect of push speed was small, accounting for a maximum volume difference of ˜2 ml between the best and worst conditions. We found that the best foamability was typically achieved with moderate values of push speed.
We find that surfactants which are relatively siloxane-rich perform better at high alcohol volume fractions, whereas those which are relatively siloxane-poor perform better at lower alcohol fractions (see figure below).
Here and following on in this document, Ax represents a block of x repeat units of poly(ethylene oxide), whereas Bx represents a block of x repeat units of siloxane. Hence A10B10A10 describes a triblock siloxane polyether, containing one 10-unit block of siloxane, capped with two 10-unit blocks of poly(ethylene) oxide.
This data clearly demonstrates the unexpected interaction between surfactant character and solvent characteristics. While A10B10A10 is superior to the displayed alternatives at 50%-70% ethanol, A14B40A14 is clearly superior above 80%. A12B25A12 has relatively robust performance across the range.
Optimization
We combined this model with several optimization procedures, targeting (for instance) the surfactant which, for a given water/alcohol mixture, could produce the maximum volume of foam with a fixed weight inclusion of surfactant. We could also predict which surfactants would produce an adequate amount of foam at the lowest possible loading.
Solubility
Two surfactants, synthesised for use in the study, were found to be partially or completely insoluble in water-ethanol mixtures. This led to the design of a solubility criterion, arising from simple geometric considerations of the surfactant's conformation in solution. The siloxane block is solvophobic and must be screened from solvent interaction by its polyether moieties to remain soluble—it likely forms a spherical globule in solution to minimise surface area. The volume of this globule, VPDMS, scales approximately linearly with the number of siloxane units in the surfactant. If we define VPDMS in polymer-equivalent units—the volume taken up by a siloxane unit—we can define:
The surface area of this globule, SPDMS, can be calculated by rearrangement of the above:
S
PDMS=361/3π1/3nPDMS2/3
By comparing this surface area to the number of polyether units, nPEther, we can calculate a ratio of polyether units per exposed PDMS unit area.
Where r=0.5 should be used for good solubility and r=0.3 should be used for moderate-low solubility.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2018055.0 | Nov 2020 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2021/052956 | 11/16/2021 | WO |