How does washing something sticky “reactivate” the stickiness of some objects?

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I’ve had several objects over the years that are sticky on purpose (game pieces for travel games, Cricut cutting mats, jelly window clings, etc), and usually instructions will say if they begin to lose their stickiness, wash with soap and water and leave out to dry. I understand that debris can cover up a sticky surface, but why does the soap not remove or otherwise create a film that would prevent the sticky from sticking? What properties of the soap and the sticky item are at play? And if the item is entirely sticky, does it count as an adhesive, and why does soap not just remove the adhesive?

In: Chemistry

5 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

soap is an emulsifier. soap molecules are little chains where one end likes water and the other likes oil. most home messes have a significant oil component, which is why it’s such a ubiquitous cleaning agent.

the sticky objects you describe simply don’t bond with the soap. since the creators know how soap works, they simply engineer their product to not react chemically with it.

how they do this varies quite a bit, but they’re usually plastics or rubbers with a compound that prevents them from fully solidifying.

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