AU663851B2 - Polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactants to enhance enzyme performance - Google Patents

Polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactants to enhance enzyme performance Download PDF

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AU663851B2
AU663851B2 AU86699/91A AU8669991A AU663851B2 AU 663851 B2 AU663851 B2 AU 663851B2 AU 86699/91 A AU86699/91 A AU 86699/91A AU 8669991 A AU8669991 A AU 8669991A AU 663851 B2 AU663851 B2 AU 663851B2
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enzyme
alkyl
fatty acid
composition according
polyhydroxy fatty
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Thomas Edward Cook
Mark Hsiang-Kuen Mao
Rajan Keshav Panandiker
Ann Margaret Wolff
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Procter and Gamble Co
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • C11D3/38645Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase containing cellulase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D1/00Detergent compositions based essentially on surface-active compounds; Use of these compounds as a detergent
    • C11D1/38Cationic compounds
    • C11D1/52Carboxylic amides, alkylolamides or imides or their condensation products with alkylene oxides
    • C11D1/525Carboxylic amides (R1-CO-NR2R3), where R1, R2 or R3 contain two or more hydroxy groups per alkyl group, e.g. R3 being a reducing sugar rest
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D1/00Detergent compositions based essentially on surface-active compounds; Use of these compounds as a detergent
    • C11D1/66Non-ionic compounds
    • C11D1/662Carbohydrates or derivatives
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/26Organic compounds containing nitrogen
    • C11D3/32Amides; Substituted amides
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • C11D3/38627Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase containing lipase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • C11D3/38654Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase containing oxidase or reductase
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D3/00Other compounding ingredients of detergent compositions covered in group C11D1/00
    • C11D3/16Organic compounds
    • C11D3/38Products with no well-defined composition, e.g. natural products
    • C11D3/386Preparations containing enzymes, e.g. protease or amylase
    • C11D3/38663Stabilised liquid enzyme compositions
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D1/00Detergent compositions based essentially on surface-active compounds; Use of these compounds as a detergent
    • C11D1/02Anionic compounds
    • C11D1/12Sulfonic acids or sulfuric acid esters; Salts thereof
    • C11D1/14Sulfonic acids or sulfuric acid esters; Salts thereof derived from aliphatic hydrocarbons or mono-alcohols
    • C11D1/146Sulfuric acid esters
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D1/00Detergent compositions based essentially on surface-active compounds; Use of these compounds as a detergent
    • C11D1/02Anionic compounds
    • C11D1/12Sulfonic acids or sulfuric acid esters; Salts thereof
    • C11D1/29Sulfates of polyoxyalkylene ethers
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C11ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE OILS, FATS, FATTY SUBSTANCES OR WAXES; FATTY ACIDS THEREFROM; DETERGENTS; CANDLES
    • C11DDETERGENT COMPOSITIONS; USE OF SINGLE SUBSTANCES AS DETERGENTS; SOAP OR SOAP-MAKING; RESIN SOAPS; RECOVERY OF GLYCEROL
    • C11D1/00Detergent compositions based essentially on surface-active compounds; Use of these compounds as a detergent
    • C11D1/66Non-ionic compounds
    • C11D1/72Ethers of polyoxyalkylene glycols

Abstract

Disclosed is an improved detergent composition comprising one or more anionic surfactants, nonionic surfactants, or mixtures thereof, and detersive enzymes, the improvement which comprises incorporating into said composition an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of formula (I), wherein R<1> is H1, C1-C4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R2 is C5-C31 hydrocarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least three hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof.

Description

_IL~
OPI DATE 28/04/92 AOJP DATE 11/06/92 APPLN. ID 86699 91H PCT NUMBFR PCT/US91/07028 INTERNA1 (51) International Patent Classification 5 C11D 1/52, 3/386 Al (11) International Publication Number: (43) International Publication Date: REATY (PCT) WO 92/06154 16 April 1992 (16.04.92) (21) International Application Number: PCT/US91/07028 (22) International Filing Date: 25 September 1991 (25.09.91) Priority data: 590,614 715,170 755,904 28 September 1990 (28.09.90) 14 June 1991 (14.06.91) 6 September 1991 (06.09.91) (71)Applicant: THE PROCTER GAMBLE COMPANY [US/US]; One Procter Gamble Plaza, Cincinnati, OH 45202 (US).
(72)Inventors: MAO, Mark, Hsiang-Kuen 4114 Fox Hollow Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45241 COOK, Thomas, Edward 4760 Chapel Ridge Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45223 PANANDIKER, Rajan, Keshav 1321 Williamsburg Road, Cincinnati, Oil 45215 WOLFF, Ann, Margarei; 4570 Boomer Road, Cincinnati, OH1 45247
(US).
(74) Agent: REED, David; The Procter Gamble Company, Ivorydale Technical Center, 5299 Spring Grove Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45217-1087 (US).
(81) Designated States: AT, AT (European patent), AU, BB, BE (European patent), BF (OAPI patent), BG, BJ (OAPI patent), BR, CA, CF (OAPI patent), CG (OAPI patent), CH, CH (European patent), CI (OAPI patent), CM (OAPI patent), CS, DE, DE (European patent), DK, DK (European patent), ES, ES (European patent), FI, FR (European patent), GA (OAPI patent), GB, GB (European patent), GN (OAPI patent), GR (European patent), HU, IT (European patent), JP, KP, KR, LK, LU, LU (European patent), MC, MG, ML (OAPI patent), MN, MR (OAPI patent), MW, NL, NL (European patent), NO, PL, RO, SD, SE, SE (European patent), SN (OAPI patent), SU+,TD (OAPI patent), TG (OAPI patent).
Published With international search report.
663851 (54) Title: POLYHYDROXY FATTY ACID AMIDE SURFACTANTS TO ENHANCE ENZYME PERFORMANCE 0 R
I
R2-C-N R C N Z (57) Abstract Disclosed is an improved detergent composition comprising one or more anionic surfactants, nonionic surfactants, or mixtures thereof, and detersive enzymes, the improvement which comprises incorporating into said composition an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of formula wherein R 1 is HI, C 1
-C
4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C 5
-C
31 hydrocarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least three hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof.
See back of page -I r~ i I .L-l-si*l -i.
'rr r inP n ,ni4naO WO 92/06154 rLi/uavi/u/uo POLYHYDROXY FATTY ACID AMIDE SURFACTANTS TO ENHANCE ENZYME PERFORMANCE FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention pertains to detergent compositions containing enzymes. More importantly, this invention pertains to detergent compositions containing en;:yme and polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION It is common commercial practice to include various enzymes in liquid and granular laundry detergents to enhance cleaning performance. Proteolytic enzymes are well-known for this use, but other enzymes such as the amylases, the cellulases, the lipases, the peroxidases, combinations thereof, have also been suggested for such use. The literature and standard formularies are replete with references to the use of enzymes in fabric laundering compositions.
Since enzymes are biological materials they are subject to denaturation and deactivation, especially after prolonged contact with other ingredients present in fully formulated detergent compositions. Thus, a freshly formulated detergent composition containing enzymes will often exhibit substantially higher cleaning performance than will older product which has been warehoused or stored on the shelf. Shelf-stability of enzymecontaining detergent compositions, especially liquid detergents, has been of considerable concern to formulators, and a variety of enzyme stabilizers have been devised. For example, various boron compounds, formate salts, ethanolamines, and/or various short chain fatty acids are commonly added to detergent compositions to provide enzyme stability. Such stabilizers are often used in liquid detergent compositions containing enzymes.
I-
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 2- Moreover, enzymes are relatively expensive, and their inclusion in detergent compositions represents an added cost to the formulator and, ultimately, to the user. Accordingly, it would be advantageous if enzyme performance were improved by less expensive additives.
It is theoretically possible not only to stabilize enzymes against degradation, but also to enhance their performance with various boosters. However, whether stabilized or enhanced, the net objective in a market situation where long-term enzyme activity must be considered is the same the provision of better performance of the detergent composition for the user.
There is a continuing search for materials to stabilize or otherwise enhance the performance of enzymes in fully-formulated detergent compositions, inasmuch as nearly all enzymes are costly, and nearly all enzymes will lose at least some of their activity on storage.
While not intending to be limited by theory, it appears that polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactants of the type disclosed hereinafter provide a stabilizing and/or performance boosting function for enzymes. Quite possibly, the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides function by removing molecular "fragments" produced as the enzymes attack soils and stains, thereby allowing the enzymes to perform more efficiently. Whatever the mechanism of action, the invention herein achieves the ultimate goal of delivering enhanced 25 removal of enzyme-labile soils and stains and, thus, improves overall performance, in fully-f3rmulated enzyme-containing detergent compositions,.
In addition to boosting enzyme performance, the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide itself is an excellent detersive surfactant.
Moreover, this type of surfactant can be obtained largely or entirely from natural, renewable raw materials, and can be substituted in whole or part for petroleum-based surfactants without loss of detergency.
BACKGROUND ART A variety of polyhydroxy fatty acid amides have been described in the art. N-acyl, N-methyl glucamides, for example, are disclosed by J. W. Goodby, M. A. Marcus, E. Chin, and P. L.
Finn in "The Thermotropic Liquid-Crystalline Properties of Some Straight Chain Carbohydrate Amphiphiles," Liquid Crystals, 1988,
I
ii iiI| WO92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 3 Volume 3, No. 11, pp 1569-1581, and by A. Muller-Fahrnow, V.
Zabel, M. Steifa, and R. Hilgenfeld in "Molecular and Crystal Structure of a Nonionic Detergent: Nonanoyl-N-methylglucamide," J.
Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun., 1986, pp 1573-1574. The use of N-alkyl polyhydroxyamide surfactants has been of substantial interest recently for use in biochemistry, for example in the dissociation of biological membranes. See, for example, the journal article "N-D-Gluco-N-methyl-alkanamide Compounds, a New Class of Non-Ionic Detergents For Membrane Biochemistry," Biochem. J. (1982), Vol.
207, pp 363-366, by J. E. K. Hildreth.
The use of N-alkyl glucamides in detergent compositions has also been discussed. U.S. Patent 2,965,576, issued December 1960 to E. R. Wilson, and G.B. Patent 809,060, published February 18, 1959, assigned to Thomas Hedley Co., Ltd. relate to detergent compositions containing anionic surfactants and certain amide surfactants, which can include N-methyl glucamide, added as a low temperature suds enhancing agent. These compounds include an N-acyl radical of a higher straight chain fatty acid having 10-14 carbon atoms. These compositions may also contain auxiliary materials such as alkali metal phosphates, alkali metal silicates, sulfates, and carbonates. It is also generally indicated that additional constituents to impart desirable properties to the composition can also be included in the compositions, such as fluorescent dyes, bleaching agents, perfumes, etc.
U.S. Patent 2,703,798, issued March 8, 1955 to A. M.
Schwartz, relates to aqueous detergent compositions containing the condensation reaction product of N-alkyl glucamine and an aliphatic ester of a fatty acid. The product of this reaction is said to be useable in aqueous detergent compositions without further purification. It is also known to prepare a sulfuric ester of acylated glucamine as disclosed in U.S. Patent 2,717,894, issued September 13, 1955, to A. M. Schwartz.
PCT International Application WO 83/04412, published December 22, 1983, by J. Hildreth, relates to amphiphilic compounds containing polyhydroxyl aliphatic groups said to be useful for a variety of purposes including use as surfactants in cosmetics, drugs, shampoos, lotions, and eye ointments, as emulsifiers and dispensing agents for medicines, and in biochemistry for solubilizing membranes, whole cells, or other tissue samples, and for 1 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 4preparing liposomes. Included in this disclosure are compounds of I the formula R'CON(R)CH 2 R" and R"CON(R)R' wherein R is hydrogen or an organic grouping, R' is an aliphatic hydrocarbon group of at least three carbon atoms, and R" is the residue of an aldose.
European Patent 0 285 768, published October 12, 1988, H.
Kelkenberg, et al, relates to the use of N-polyhydroxy alkyl fatty acid amides as thickening agents in aqueous detergent systems.
Included are amides of the formula RiC(O)N(X)R, wherein Ri is a C -C 17 (preferably C 7
-C
17 alkyl, R, is hydrogen, a C 1 -Ci (preferably Ci-C 6 alkyl, or an alkylene oxide, and X is a polyhydroxy alkyl having four to seven carbon atoms, N-methyl, coconut fatty acid glucamide. The thickening properties of the amides are indicated as being of particular use in liquid surfactant systems containing paraffin sulfonate, although the aqueous surfactant systems can contain other anionic surfactants, such as aikylaryl sulfonates, olefin sulfonate, sulfosuccinic acid half ester salts, and fatty alcohol ether sulfonates, and nonionic surfactants such as fatty alcohol polyglycol ether, alkylphenol polyglycol ether, fatty acid polyglycol ester, polypropylene oxide-polyethylene oxide mixed polymers, etc. Paraffin sulfonate/N-methyl coconut fatty acid glucamide/nonionic surfactant shampoo formulations are exemplified. In addition to thickening attributes, the N-polyhydroxy alkyl fatty acid amides are said to have superior skin tolerance attributes.
U.S. Patent 2,982,737, issued May 2, 1961, to Boettner, et al, relates to detergent bars containing urea, sodium lauryl sulfate anionic surfactant, and an N-alkylglucamide nonionic surfactant which is selected from N-methyl,N-sorbityl lauramide and N-methyl, N-sorbityl myristamide.
SOther glucamide surfactants are disclosed, for example, in DT 2,226,872, published December 20, 1973, H. W. Eckert, et al, which relates to washing compositions comprising one or more surfactants and builder salts selected from polymeric phosphates, sequestering agents, and washing alkalis, improved by the addition of an N-acylpolyhydroxy-alkyl-amine of the formula RiC(0)N(R 2
)CH
2 (CHOH)nCH2OH, wherein Ri is a Ci-C 3 alkyl, R 2 is a C 10
-C
22 alkyl, and n is 3 or 4. The N-acylpolyhydroxyalkyl-amine is added as a soil suspending agent.
61 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 U.S. Patent 3,654,166, issued April 4, 1972, to H. W. Eckert, et al, relates to detergent compositions comprising at least one surfactant selected from the group of anionic, zwitterionic, and nonionic surfactants and, as a textile softener, an N-acyl, N-alkyl polyhydroxylalkyl compound of the formula RiN(Z)C(0)R 2 wherein RI is a Co-C 2 2 alkyl, R 2 is a C 7 -Cl alkyl, Rz and R, total from 23 to 39 carbon atoms, and Z is a polyhydroxyalkyl which can be -CH 2 (CHOH)mCH20H where m is 3 or 4.
U.S. Patent 4,021,539, issued May 3, 1977, to H. Mihler, et al, relates to skin treating cosmetic compositions containing N-polyhydroxylalkyl-amines which include compounds of the formula RiN(R)CH(CHOH)mR 2 wherein R 1 is H, lower alkyl, hydroxy-lower alkyl, or aminoalkyl, as well as heterocyclic aminoalkyl, R is the same as R, but both cannot be H, and R 2 is CH20H or COOH.
French Patent 1,360,018, April 26, 1963, assigned to Commercial Solvents Corporation, relates to solutions of formaldehyde stabilized against polymerization with the addition of amides of the formula RC(O)N(Ri)G wherein R is a carboxylic acid functionality having at least seven carbon atoms, R, is hydrogen or a lower alkyl group, and G is a glycitol radical with at least carbon atoms.
German Patent 1,261,861, February 29, 1968, A. Heins, relates to glucamine derivatives useful as wetting and dispersing agents of the formula N(R)(Ri)(R 2 wherein R is a sugar residue of glucamine, R 1 is a C 1 o-Czo alkyl radical, and R 2 is a Ci-C s acyl radical.
G.B. Patent 745,036, published February 15, 1956, assigned to Atlas Powder Company, relates to heterocyclic amides and carboxylic esters thereof that are said to be useful as chemical intermediates, emulsifiers, wetting and dispersing agents, detergents, textile softeners, etc. The compounds are expressed by the formula N(R)(RI)C(O)R 2 wherein R is the residue of an anhydrized hexane pentol or a carboxylic acid ester thereof, R 1 is a monovalent hydrocarbon radical, and -C(O)R 2 is the acyl radical of a carboxylic acid having from 2 to 25 carbon atoms.
U.S. Patent 3,312,627, issued April 4, 1967 to D. T. Hooker, discloses solid toilet bars that are substantially free of anionic detergents and alkaline builder materials, and which contain "1 -6A- SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION A liquid detergent composition having improved enzyme stability or improved enzyme cleaning performance comprising one or more anionic surfactants, nonionic surfactants, or mixtures thereof, builders and auxiliary detersive ingredients and detersive enzymes, wherein said composition contains an enzyme performanceenhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula: O R 1 II I R2C N Z wherein R 1 is H, C,-C 4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, or 2-hydroxypropyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C5-031 hydrocarbyl, and Z is polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof.
i Preferably the composition includes 1 to 50 0 b of anionic surfactant; 0.0001 to 2% of active detersive enzyme and is substantially free of alkybenzene sulfonate.
The present invention further provides a method for improving the cleaning performance of detergent compositions containing detersive surfactant, such as anionic, nonionic, or cationic surfactants, especially anionic surfactants, in the presence of an aqueous media, by adding to said detergent composition an enzyme enhancing amount of the above-described polyhydroxy fatty acid amide.
The present invention further provides a method for cleaning substrates, such a 25 as fibers, fabrics, hard surfaces, skin, etc., by contacting said substrate with a detergent composition comprising one or more anionic, nonionic, or cationic surfactants, and a detersive enzyme, wherein said composition comprises an enzyme performance enhancing amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant.
In a further aspect the invention provides a granular detergent composition having improved enzyme cleaning performance comprising one of more anionic 0. -W I I I _R -6B surfactants, nonionic surfactants, nonionic surfactants, or mixtures thereof, builders and auxiliary detersive ingredients and detersive enzymes, characterized in that said composition contains an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula: O R 1 I- I R2 -C N -Z wherein R 1 is H, C,-C 4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, or 2-hydroxypropyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C 5
-C
31 hydrocarbyl, and Z is polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof.
Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the word "comprise" and variations of the word, such as "comprising" and "comprises", is not intended to exclude other additives or components or integers.
1 4 *It' "Nor WO 92/06154 PCr/US91/07028 7 pe.rformance enhancing- amount of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION Polyhvdroxv Fatty Acid Amide Surfactant The detergent compositions hereof contain an "enzyme performance-enhancing amount" of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide. By "enzyme-enhancing" is meant that the formulator of the composition can select an amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide to be incorporated into the compositions that will improve enzyme cleaning performance of the detergent composition. In general, for detergent containing conventional levels of enzyme, the incorporation of about by weight, polyhydroxy fatty acid amide will enhance enzyme performance.
The detergent compositions hereof will typically comprise at least about weight basis, polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant, preferably at least about even more preferably will comprise from about 3% to about 50%, most preferably from about 3% to about 30%, of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide.
The polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant component of the present invention comprises compounds of the structural formula: 0 R 1 II I
R
2 C N Z wherein: R 1 is H, C 1
-C
4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, preferably Ci-C 4 alkyl, more preferably C 1 or C 2 alkyl, most preferably C, alkyl methyl); and R 2 is a C 5
-C
31 hydrocarbyl, preferably straight chain
C
7
-C
1 9 alkyl or alkenyl, more preferably straight chain C 9
-C
17 alkyl or alkenyl, most preferably straight chain C 11 -Cis alkyl or alkenyl, or mixtures thereof; and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to the chain, or an alkoxylated derivative (preferably ethoxylated or propoxylated) thereof. Z preferably will be derived from a reducing sugar in a reductive amination reaction; more preferably Z will be a glycityl. Suitable reducing sugars include glucose, fructose, maltose, lactose, galactose, mannose, and xylose. As raw materials, high dextrose corn syrup, high fructose corn syrup, and high maltose corn syrup can be utilized as well as the individual sugars listed above. These II t -I- 111 a WO 92/06154 PCr/US91/07028 -8corn syrups may yield a mix of sugar components for Z. It should be understood that it is by no means intended to excludde other suitable raw materials. Z preferably will be selected from the group consisting of -CHz-(CHOH)n-CH 2 OH, -CH(CH 2 0H)-(CHOH)n-i-
CH
2 OH, -CH 2
-(CHOH)
2
(CHOR')(CHOH)-CH
2 0H, and alkoxylated derivatives thereof, where n is an integer from 3 to 5, inclusive, and R' is H or a cyclic or aliphatic monosaccharide. Most preferred are glycityls wherein n is 4, particularly -CH 2
-(CHOH)
4
-CH
2
OH.
In Formula R' can be, for example, N-methyl, N-ethyl, N-propyl, N-isopropyl, N-butyl, N-2-hydroxy ethyl, or N-2-hydroxy propyl.
R
2 -CO-N< can be, for example, cocamide, stearamide, oleamide, lauramide, myristamide, capricamide, palmitamide, tallowamide, etc.
Z can be 1-deoxyglucityl, 2-deoxyfructityl, 1-deoxymaltityl, 1-deoxylactityl, 1-deoxygalactityl, 1-deoxymannityl, 1-deoxymaltotriotityl, etc.
S Methods for making polyhydroxy fatty acid amides are known in the art. In general, they can be made by reacting an alkyl amine with a reducing sugar in a reductive amination reaction to form a corresponding N-alkyl polyhydroxyamine, and then reacting the N-alkyl polyhydroxyamine with a fatty aliphatic ester or triglyceride in a condensation/amidation step to form the N-alkyl, N-polyhydroxy fatty acid amide product. Processes for making compositions containing polyhydroxy fatty acid amides are disclosed, for example, in G.B. Patent Specification 809,060, published February 18, 1959, by Thomas Hedley Co., Ltd., U.S.
Patent 2,965,576, issued December 20, 1960 to E. R. Wilson, and U.S. Patent 2,703,798, Anthony M. Schwartz, issued March 8, 1955, and U.S. Patent 1,985,424, issued December 25, 1934 to Piggott, each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
In one process for producing N-alkyl or N-hydroxyalkyl, N-deoxyglycityl fatty acid amides wherein the glycityl component is derived from glucose and the N-alkyl or N-hydroxyalkyl functionality is N-methyl, N-ethyl, N-propyl, N-butyl, N-hydroxyethyl, or N-hydroxy-propyl, the product is made by reacting N-alkyl- or N-hydroxyalkyl-glucamine with a fatty ester selected from fatty WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 9 methyl esters, fatty ethyl esters, and fatty triglycerides in the presence of a catalyst selected from the group consisting of trilithium phosphate, trisodium phosphate, tripotassium phosphate, tetrasodium pyrophosphate, pentapotassium tripolyphosphate, lithium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, lithium carbonate, sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, disodium tartrate, dipotassium tartrate, sodium potassium tartrate, trisodium citrate, tripotassium citrate, sodium basic silicates, potassium basic silicates, sodium basic aluminosilicates, and potassium basic aluminosilicates, and mixtures thereof.
The amount of catalyst is preferably from about 0.5 mole to about 50 mole more preferably from about 2.0 mole to about mole on an N-alkyl or N-hydroxyalkyl-glucamine molar basis.
The reaction is preferably carried out at from about 138°C to about 170°C for typically from about 20 to about 90 minutes. When triglycerides are used as the fatty ester source, the reaction is also preferably carried out using from about 1 to about 10 weight of a phase trans.er agent, calculated on a weight percent basis of total reaction mixture, selected from saturated fatty alcohol polyethoxylates, alkylpolyglycosides, linear glycamide surfactant, and mixtures thereof.
Preferably, this process is carried out as follows: preheating the fatty ester to about 138°C to about 170°C; adding the N-alkyl or N-hydroxyalkyl glucamine to the heated fatty acid ester and mixing to the extent needed to form a two-phase liquid/liquid mixture; mixing the catalyst into the reaction mixture; and stirring for the specified reaction time.
Also preferably, from about 2% to about 20% of preformed Slinear N-alkyl/N-hydroxyalkyl, N-linear glucosyl fatty acid amide product is added to the reaction mixture, by weight of the reactants, as the phase transfer agent if the fatty ester is triglyceride. This seeds the reaction, thereby increasing reaction rate. A detailed experimental procedure is provided below.
WO 92/06154 PC/US91/07028
B
The polyhydroxy "fatty acid" amide materials used herein also offer the advantages to the detergent formulator that they can be prepared wholly or primarily from natural, renewable, nonpetrochemical feedstocks and are degradable. They also exhibit low toxicity to aquatic life.
It should be recognized that along with the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides of Formula the processes used to produce them will also typically produce quantities of nonvolatile by-product such as esteramides and cyclic polyhydroxy fatty acid amide. The level of these by-products will vary depending upon the particular reactants and process conditions. Preferably, the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide incorporated into the detergent compositions hereof will be provided in a form such that the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide-containing composition added to the detergent contains less than about 10%, preferably less than about of cyclic polyhydroxy fatty acid amide. The preferred processes described above are advantageous in that they can yield rather low levels of by-products.
Enzymes Detersive enzymes can be included in the detergent formulations for a wide variety of purposes including removal of proteinbased, carbohydrate-based, or triglyceride-based stains, for example, and prevention of refugee dye transfer. The enzymes to be incorporated include proteases, amylases, lipases, cellulases, and peroxidases, as well as mixtures thereof. Other types of enzymes may also be included. They may be of any suitable origin, such as vegetable, animal, bacterial, fungal and yeast origin.
However, their choice is governed by several factors such as pH-activity and/or stability optima, thermostability, stability versus active detergents, builders and so on. In this respect bacterial or fungal enzymes are preferred, such as bacterial amylases and proteases, and fungal cellulases.
Enzymes are normally incorporated at levels sufficient to provide up to about 5 mg by weight, more typically about 0.05 mg to about 3 mg, of active enzyme per gram of the composition.
Suitable examples of proteases are the subtilisins which are obtained from particular strains of B.subtilis and B.licheniforms.
Another suitable protease is obtained from a strain of Bacillus,
.B
Our Ref: 31b3z9 2849n WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 11 having maximum activity throughout the pH range of 8-12, developed and sold by Novo Industries A/S under the registered trade name ESPERASE. The preparation of this enzyme and analogous enzymes is described in British Patent Specification No. 1,243,784 of Novo.
Proteolytic enzymes suitable for removing protein-based stains that are commercially available include those sold under the tradenames ALCALASE and SAVINASE by Novo Industries A/S (Denmark) and MAXATASE by International Bio-Synthetics, Inc. (The Netherlands).
Of interest in the category of proteolytic enzymes, especially for liquid detergent compositions, are enzymes referred to herein as Protease A and Protease B. Protease A and methods for its preparation are described in European Patent Application 130,756, published January 9, 1985, incorporated herein by reference. Protease B is a proteolytic enzyme which differs from Protease A in that it has a leucine substituted for tyrosine in position 217 in its amino acid sequence. Protease B is described in European Patent Application Serial No. 87303761.8, filed April 28, 1987, incorporated herein by reference. Methods for preparation of Protease B are also disclosed in European Patent Application 130,756, Bott et al, published January 9, 1985, incorporated herein by reference.
Amylases include, for example, a-amylases obtained from a special strain of B.licheniforms, described in more detail in British Patent Specification No. 1,296,839 (Novo), previously incorporated herein by reference. Amylolytic proteins include, for example, RAPIDASE, International Bio-Synthetics, Inc. and TERMAMYL, Novo Industries.
The cellulases usable in the present invention include both bacterial or fungal cellulase. Preferably, they will have a pH optimum of between 5 and 9.5. Suitable cellulases are disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,435,307, Barbesgoard et al, issued March 6, 1984, Sincorporated herein by reference, which discloses fungal cellulase produced from Humicola insolens. Suitable cellulases are also disclosed in GB-A-2.075.028; GB-A-2.095.275 and DE-OS-2.247.832.
II_ 1 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -12- Examples of such cellulases are cellulases produced by a strain of Humicola insolens (Humicola grisea var. thermoidea), particularly the Humicola strain DSM 1800, and cellulases produced by a fungus of Bacillus N or a cellulase 212-producing fungus belonging to the genus Aeromonas, and cellulase extracted from the hepatopancreas of a marine mollusc (Dolabella Auricula Solander).
Suitable lipase enzymes for detergent usage include those produced by microorganisms of the Pseudomonas group, such as Pseudomonas stutzeri ATCC 19.154, as disclosed in British Patent 1,372,034, incorporated herein by reference. Suitable lipases include those which show a positive immunoligical cross-reaction with the antibody of the lipase, produced by the microorganism Pseudomonas fluorescens IAM 1057. This lipase and a method for its purification have been described in Japanese Patent Application 53-20487, laid open to public inspection on February 24, 1978. This lipase is available from Amano Pharmaceutical Co.
Ltd., Nagoya, Japan, under the trade name Lipase P "Amano," hereinafter referred to as "Amano-P." Such lipases of the present invention should show a positive immunological cross reaction with the Amano-P antibody, using the standard and well-known immunodiffusion procedure according to Ouchterlony (Acta. Med. Scan., 133, pages 76-79 (1950)). These lipases, and a method for their immunological cross-reaction with Amano-P, are also described in U.S. Patent 4,707,291, Thom et al, issued November 17, 1987, incorporated herein by reference. Typical examples thereof are the Amano-P lipase, the lipase ex Pseudomonas fragi FERM P 1339 (available under the trade name Amano-B), lipase ex Psuedomonas nitroreducens var. lipolyticum FERM P 1338 (available under the trade name Amano-CES), lipases ex Chromobacter viscosum, e.g.
Chromobacter viscosum var. lipolyticum NRRLB 3673, commercially available from Toyo Jozo Co., Tagata, Japan; and further Chromobacter viscosum lipases from U.S. Biochemical Corp., U.S.A.
and Disoynth Co., The Netherlands, and lipases ex Pseudomonas gladioli.
Peroxidase enzymes are used in combination with oxygen sources, percarbonate, perborate, persulfate, hydrogen peroxide, etc. They are used for "solution bleaching," i.e. to prevent transfer of dyes or pigments removed from substrates WO 92/06154 PCIFUS91/07028 13 during wash operations to other substrates in the wash solution.
Peroxidase enzymes are known in the art, and include, for example, horseradish peroxidase, ligninase, and haloperoxidase such as chloro- and bromo-peroxidase. Peroxidase-containing detergent compositions are disclosed, for example, in PCT International Application WO 89/099813, published October 19, 1989, by 0. Kirk, assigned to Novo Industries A/S, incorporated herein by reference.
A wide range of enzyme materials and means for their incorporation into synthetic detergent granules is also disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,553,139, issued January 5, 1971 to McCarty et al (incorporated herein by reference). Enzymes are further disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,101,457, Place et al, issued July 18, 1978, and in U.S. Patent 4,507,219, Hughes, issued March 26, 1985, both incorporated herein by reference. Enzyme materials useful for liquid detergent formulations, and their incorporation into such formulations, are disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,261,868, Hora et al, issued April 14, 1981, also incorporated herein by reference.
For granular detergents, the enzymes are preferably coated or prilled with additives inert toward the enzymes to minimize dust formation and improve storage stability. Techniques for accomplishing this are well known in the art. In liquid formulations, an enzyme stabilization system is preferably utilized. Enzyme stabilization techniques for aqueous detergent compositions are well known in the art. For example, one technique for enzyme stabilization in aqueous solutions involves the use of free calcium ions from sources such as calcium acetate, calcium formate, and calcium propionate. Calcium ions can be used in combination with short chain carboxylic acid salts, perferably formates. See, for example, U.S. Patent 4,318,818, Letton, et al, issued March 9, 1982, incorporated herein by reference. It has also been proposed to use polyols like glycerol and sorbitol.
Alkoxy-alcohols, dialkylglycoethers, mixtures of polyvalent 4 alcohols with polyfunctional aliphatic amines such as diethanolamine, triethanolamine, di-isopropanolamine, etc.), and boric acid or alkali metal borate. Enzyme stabilization techniques are additionally disclosed and exemplified in U.S. Patent 4,261,868, issued April 14, 1981 to Horn, et al, U. S. Patent 3,600,319, issued August 17, 1971 to Gedge, et al, both incorporated herein by reference, and European Patent Application
T.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 14 Publication No. 0 199 405, Application No. 86200585.5, published October 29, 1986, Venegas. Non-boric acid and borate stabilizers are preferred. Enzyme stabilization systems are also described, for example, in U.S. Patents 4,261,868, 3,600,319, and 3,519,570.
In addition to the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, the compositions hereof can contain other detersive surfactants to aid in cleaning performance. The particular surfaz.tants utilized can vary widely utilizing any detersive surfactants useful for the particular end-use envisioned. Enzyme-containing detergents will most commonly be used for cleaning of laundry, fabrics, textiles, fibers, hard surfaces, etc. Suitable surfactants include anionic, nonionic, cationic, and other surfactants, and are exemplified below. Preferably, the compositions will include one or more anionic surfactants, one of more other nonionic surfactants, or a combination thereof. The benefits of the present invention are especially pronounced in compositions containing surfactants or other ingredients that are harsh to the enzymes. These, in general, include (but are not limited to) anionic surfactants such as alkyl ester sulfonates, linear alkyl benzene sulfonates, alkyl sulfates, etc. Typically, the amount of additional detersive surfactant present is from auc't 3% to about 40%, by weight, of the detergent composition, preferably from about 5% to about Suitable surfactants are described below.
Anionic Surfactants One type of anionic surfactant which can be utilized encompass alkyl ester sulfonates. These are desirable because they can be made with renewable, non-petroleum resources. Preparation of the alkyl ester sulfonate surfactant component can be effected according to known methods disclosed in the technical literature. For instance, linear esters of C 8
-C
2 0 carboxylic acids can be sulfonated with gaseous SO0 according to "The Journal Sof the American Oil Chemists Society," 52 (1975), pp. 323-329.
Suitable starting materials would include natural fatty substances as derived from tallow, palm, and coconut oils, etc.
The preferred alkyl ester sulfonate surfactant, especially for laundry applications, comprise alkyl ester sulfonate surfactants of the structural formula: WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 15 0 I1
R
3 CH C OR 4 S03M wherein R 3 is a Ce-C 20 hydrocarbyl, preferably an alkyl, or combination thereof, R 4 is a Ci-C 6 hydrocarbyl, preferably an alkyl, or combination thereof, and M is a soluble salt-forming cation. Suitable salts include metal salts such as sodium, potassium, and lithium salts, and substituted or unsubstituted ammonium salts, such as methyl-, dimethyl, -trimethyl, and' quaternary ammonium cations, tetramethyl-ammonium and dimethyl piperdinium, and cations derived from alkanolamines, monoethanolamine, diethanolamine, and triethanolamine.
Preferably, R 3 is C 10
-C
16 alkyl, and R 4 is methyl, ethyl or isopropyl. Especially preferred are the methyl ester sulfonates wherein R 3 is C 14 -C16 alkyl.
Alkyl sulfate surfactants are another type of anionic surfactant of importance for use herein. In addition to providing excellent overall cleaning ability when used in combination with polyhydroxy fatty acid amides, including good grease/oil cleaning over a wide range of temperatures, wash concentrations, and wash times, dissolution of alkyl sulfates can be obtained, as well as improved formulability in liquid detergent formulations are water soluble salts or acids of the formula ROS03M wherein R preferably is a C 0 o-Cz4 hydrocarbyl, preferably an alkyl or hydroxyalkyl having a Co 1 -C2o alkyl component, more preferably z C12-Cie alkyl or hydroxyalkyl, and M is H or a cation, an alkali metal cation sodium, potassium, lithium), substituted or unsubstituted ammonium cations such as methyl-, dimethyl-, and trimethyl ammonium and quaternary ammonium cations, e.g., tetramethyl-ammonium and dimethyl piperdinium, and cations derived from alkanolamines such as ethanolamine, diethanolamine, triethanolamine, and mixtures thereof, and the like. Typically, alkyl chains of C 12 16 are preferred for lower wash temperatures below about 50'C) and C 16 alkyl chains are preferred for higher wash temperatures above about IIIIHI I
I-C
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 16 Alkyl alkoxylated sulfate surfactants are another category of useful anionic surfactant. These surfactants are water soluble salts or acids typcially of the formula RO(A)mS03M wherein R is an unsubstituted C 10
-C
24 alkyl or hydroxyalkyl group having a Co-C 24 alkyl component, preferably a C 12
-C
2 0 alkyl or hydroxyalkyl, more preferably C 12
-C
18 alkyl or hydroxyalkyl, A is an ethoxy or propoxy unit, m is greater than zero, typically between about and about 6, more preferably between about 0.5 and about 3, and M is H or a cation which can be, for example, a metal cation sodium, potassium, lithium, calcium, magnesium, etc.), ammonium or substituted-ammonium cation. Alkyl ethoxylated sulfates as well as alkyl propoxylated sulfates are contemplated herein. Specific examples of substituted ammonium cations include methyl-, dimethyl-, trimethyl-ammonium and quaternary ammonium cations, such as tetramethyl-ammonium, dimethyl piperdinium and cations derived from alkanolamines, e.g. monoethanolamine, diethanolamine, and triethanolamine, and mixtures thereof. Exemplary surfactants are C12-C 18 alkyl polyethoxylate sulfate, C 12
-C
18 alkyl polyethoxylate (2.25) sulfate, C 12 -Ca alkyl polyethoxylate sulfate, and C 12 -Cza alkyl polyethoxylate sulfate wherein M is conveniently selected from sodium and potassium.
Other Anionic Surfactants Other anionic surfactants useful for detersive purposes can also be included in the compositions hereof. These can include salts (including, for example, sodium, potassium, ammonium, and substituted ammonium salts such as mono-, di- and triethanolamine salts) of soap, C 9
-C
2 0 linear alkylbenzenesulphonates, C 8
-C
22 primary or secondary alkanesulphonates, C 8
-C
24 olefinsulphonates, sulphonated polycarboxylic acids prepared by sulphonation of the pyrolyzed product of alkaline earth metal citrates, as described in British Patent Specification No. 1,082,179, alkyl glycerol sulfonates, fatty acyl glycerol sulfonates, fatty oleyl glycerol sulfates, alkyl phenol ethylene oxide ether sulfates, paraffin sulfonates, alkyl phosphates, isethionates such as the acyl isethionates, N-acyl taurates, fatty acid amides of methyl tauride, alkyl succinamates and sulfosuccinates, monoesters of sulfosuccinate (especially saturated and unsaturated C 12 -C,1 monoesters) diesters of sulfosuccinate (especially saturated and WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 17unsaturated C 6
-C
14 diesters), N-acyl sarcosinates, sulfates of alkylpolysaccharides such as the sulfates of alkylpolyglucoside (the nonionic nonsulfated compounds being described below), branched primary alkyl sulfates, alkyl polyethoxy carboxylates such as those of the formula RO(CH 2
CH
2 0)kCH 2 COO-M+ wherein R is a
C
8
-C
22 alkyl, k is an integer from 0 to 10, and M is a soluble salt-forming cation, and fatty acids esterified with isethionic acid and neutralized with sodium hydroxide. Resin acids and hydrogenated resin acids are also suitable, such as rosin, hydrogenated rosin, and resin acids and hydrogenated resin acids present in or derived from tall oil. Further examples are described in "Surface Active Agents and Detergents" (Vol. I and II by Schwartz, Perry and Berch). A variety of such surfactants are also generally disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,929,678, issued December 30, 1975 to Laughlin et al, at Column 23, line 58 through Column 29, line 23 (herein incorporated by reference).
Nonionic Detergent Surfactants Suitable nonionic detergent surfactants are generally disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,929,678, Laughlin et al, issued December 30, 1975, at column 13, line 14 through column 16, line 6, incorporated herein by reference. Exemplary, non-limiting classes of useful nonionic surfactants are listed below.
1. The polyethylene, polypropylene, and polybutylene oxide condensates of alkyl phenols. In general, the polyethylene oxide condensates are preferred. These compounds include the condensation products of alkyl phenols having an alkyl group containing from about 6 to about 12 carbon atoms in either a straight chain or branched chain configuration with the alkylene oxide. In a preferred embodiment, the ethylene oxide is present in an amount equal to from about 5 to about 25 moles of ethylene oxide per mole of alkyl phenol. Commercially available nonionic surfactants of this type include IGEPAL CO-630, marketed by the GAF Corporation; and TRITON X-45, X-114, X-100, and X-102, all marketed by the Rohm Haas Company. These compounds are commonly referred to as alkyl phenol alkoxylates, alkyl phenol ethoxylates).
2. The condensation products of aliphatic alcohols with from about 1 to about 25 moles of ethylene oxide. The alkyl chain of the aliphatic alcohol can either be straight or branched, primary Wo 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 18 or secondary, and generally contains from about 8 to about 22 carbon atoms. Particularly preferred are the condensation products of alcohols having an alkyl group containing from about to about 20 carbon atoms with from about 2 to about 18 moles of ethylene oxide per mole of alcohol. Examples of commercially available nonionic surfactants of this type include TERGITOL 15-S-9 (the condensation product of C 11 -Cs linear secondary alcohol with 9 moles ethylene oxide), TERGITOL 24-L-6 NMW (the condensation product of C 12
-C
14 primary alcohol with 6 moles ethylene oxide with a narrow molecular weight distribution), both marketed by Union Carbide Corporation; NEODOL 45-9 (the condensation product of C 14
-C
1 s linear alcohol with 9 moles of ethylene oxide), NEODOL 23-6.5 (the condensation product of C 12
-C
13 linear alcohol with 6.5 moles of ethylene oxide), NEODOL 45-7 (the condensation product of C 14
-C
15 linear alcohol with 7 moles of ethylene oxide), NEODOL 45-4 (the condensation product of C 14 -Cis linear alcohol with 4 moles of ethylene oxide), marketed by Shell Chemical Company, and KYRO EOB (the condensation product of
CI
3 -C,1 alcohol with 9 moles ethylene oxide), marketed by The Procter Gamble Company. This category of nonionic surfactant is referred to generally as "alkyl ethoxylates." 3. The condensation products of ethylene oxide with a hydrophobic base formed by the condensation of propylene oxide with propylene glycol. The hydrophobic portion of these compounds preferably has a molecular weight of from about 1500 to about 1800 and exhibits water insolubility. The addition of polyoxyethylene moieties to this hydrophobic portion tends to increase the water solubility of the molecule as a whole, and the liquid character of the product is retained up to the point where the polyoxyethylene content is about 50% of the total weight of the condensation product, which corresponds to condensation with up to about Smoles of ethylene oxide. Examples of compounds of this type include certain of the commercially-available PLURONIC surfactants, marketed by BASF.
4. The condensation products of ethylene oxide with the product resulting from the reaction of propylene oxide and ethylenediamine. The hydrophobic moiety of these products consists of the reaction product of ethylenediamine and excess WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -19propylene oxide, and generally has a molecular weight of from about 2500 to about 3000. This hydrophobic moiety is condensed with ethylene oxide to the extent that the condensation product contains from about 40% to about 80% by weight of polyoxyethylene and has a molecular weight of from about 5,000 to about 11,000.
Examples of this type of nonionic surfactant include certain of the commercially available TETRONIC compounds, marketed by BASF.
Semi-polar nonionic surfactants are a special category of nonionic surfactants which include water-soluble amine oxides containing one alkyl moiety of from about 10 to about 18 carbon atoms and 2 moieties selected from the group consisting of alkyl groups and hydroxyalkyl groups containing from about 1 to about 3 carbon atoms; water-soluble phosphine oxides containing one alkyl moiety of from about 10 to about 18 carbon atoms and 2 moieties selected from the group consisting of alkyl groups and hydroxyalkyl groups containing from about 1 to about 3 carbon atoms; anr, water-soluble sulfoxides containing one alkyl moiety of from about to about 18 carbon atoms and a moiety selected from the group consisting of alkyl and hydroxyalkyl moieties of from about 1 to about 3 carbon atoms.
Semi-polar nonionic detergent surfactants include the amine oxide surfactants having the formula 0
R
3
(OR
4 )xN(R 5 2 wherein R 3 is an alkyl, hydroxyalkyl, or alkyl phenyl group or mixtures thereof containing from about 8 to about 22 carbon atoms;
R
4 is an alkylene or hydroxyalkylene group containing from about 2 to about 3 carbon atoms or mixtures thereof; x is from 0 to about 3; and each R 5 is an alkyl or hydroxyalkyl group containing from about 1 to about 3 carbon atoms or a polyethylene oxide group containing from about 1 to about 3 ethylene oxide groups. The R groups can be attached to each other, through an oxygen or nitrogen atom, to form a ring structure.
These amine oxide surfactants in particular include Cio-C 18 alkyl dimethyl amine oxides and C 8
-C
12 alkoxy ethyl dihydroxy ethyl amine oxides.
h. WO 92/06154 PC/US!/07028 20 6. Alkylpolysaccharides disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,565,647, Llenado, issued January 21, 1986, having a hydrophobic group containing from about 6 to about 30 carbon atoms, preferably from about 10 to about 16 carbon atoms and a polysaccharide, a polyglycoside, hydrophilic group containing from about 1.3 to about 10, preferably from about 1.3 to about 3, most preferably from about 1.3 to about 2.7 saccharide units. Any reducing saccharide containing 5 or 6 carbon atoms can be used, e.g., glucose, galactose and galactosyl moieties can be substituted for the glucosyl moieties. (Optionally the hydrophobic group is attached at the etc. positions thus giving a glucose or galactose as opposed to a glucoside or galactoside.) The intersaccharide bonds can be, between the one position of the additional saccharide units and the and/or 6positions on the preceding saccharide units.
Optionally, and less desirably, there can be a polyalkyleneoxide chain joining the hydrophobic moiety and the polysaccharide moiety. The preferred alkyleneoxide is ethylene oxide. Typical hydrophobic groups include alkyl groups, either saturated or unsaturated, branched or unbranched containing from about 8 to about 18, preferably from about 10 to about 16, carbon atoms.
Preferably, the alkyl group is a straight chain saturated alkyl group. The alkyl group can contain up to about 3 hydroxy groups and/or the polyalkyleneoxide chain can contain up to about preferably less than 5, alkyleneoxide moieties. Suitable alkyl polysaccharides are octyl, nonyldecyl, undecyldodecyl, tridecyl, tetradecyl, pentadecyl, hexadecyl, heptadecyl, and octadecyl, di-, tri-, tetra-, penta-, and hexaglucosides, galactosides, lactosides, glucoses, fructosides, fructoses and/or galactoses.
30 Suitable mixtures include coconut alkyl, di-, tri-, tetra-, and pentaglucosides and tallow alkyl tetra-, penta-, and hexaglucosides.
The preferred alkylpolyglycosides have the formula
R
2 0(CnH 2 nO)t(glycosy1)x 35 wherein R 2 is selected from the group consisting of alkyl, alkylphenyl, hydroxyalkyl, hydroxyalkylphenyl, and mixtures thereof in which the alkyl groups contain from about 10 to about 18, preferably from about 12 to about 14, carbon atoms; n is 2 or 3, r \i
L:
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -21 preferably 2; t is from 0 to about 10, preferably 0; and x is from about 1.3 to about 10, preferably from about 1.3 to about 3, most preferably from about 1.3 to about 2.7. The glycosyl is preferably derived from glucose. To prepare these compounds, the alcohol or alkylpolyethoxy alcohol is formed first and then reacted with glucose, or a source of glucose, to form the glucoside (attachment at the 1-position). The additional glycosyl units can then be attached between their 1-position and the preceding glycosyl units 4- and/or 6-position, preferably predominately the 2-position.
7. Fatty acid amide surfactants having the formula: 0
R
6 C N(R7)2 wherein R 6 is an alkyl group containing from about 7 to about 21 (preferably from about 9 to about 17) carbon atoms and each R 7 is selected from the group consisting of hydrogen, Ci-C 4 alkyl, Ci-C 4 hydroxyalkyl, and -(C 2
H
4 0)xH where x varies from about 1 to about 3.
Preferred amides are C 8 -C20 ammonia amides, monoethanolamides, diethanolamides, and isopropanolamides.
Cationic Surfactants Cationic detersive surfactants can also be included in detergent compositions of the present invention. Cationic surfactants include the ammonium surfactants such as alkyldimethylammonium halogenides, and those surfactants having the formula:
[R
2
(OR
3 )y][R(OR 3 )y] 2
RSN+X-
wherein R 2 is an alkyl or alkyl benzyl group having from about 8 to about 18 carbon atoms in the alkyl chain, each R 3 is selected from the group consisting of -CH 2
CH
2
-CH
2
CH(CH
3
-CHCH(CH
2
-CH
2
CH
2
CH
2 and mixtures thereof; each R 4 is selected from the group consisting of C 1
-C
4 alkyl, C 1
-C
4 t hydroxyalkyl, benzyl, ring structures formed by joining the two R 4 groups, -CH 2
CHOH-CHOHCOR
6
CHOHCH
2 0H wherein R 6 is any hexose or hexose polymer having a molecular weight less than about 1000, and hydrogen when y is not 0; R 5 is the same as R 4 or is an alkyl chain wherein the total number of carbon atoms of R 2 plus R 5 is not more than about 18; each y is from 0 to about 10 and the sum of the y values is from 0 to about 15; and X is any compatible anion.
i WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -22 Other cationic surfactants useful herein are also described in U.S. Patent 4,228,044, Cambre, issued October 14, 1980, incorporated herein by reference.
Other Surfactants Ampholytic surfactants can be incorporated into the detergent compositions hereof. These surfactants can be broadly described as aliphatic derivatives of secondary or tertiary amines, or aliphatic derivatives of heterocyclic secondary and tertiary amines in which the aliphatic radical can be straight chain or branched. One of the aliphatic substituents contains at least about 8 carbon atoms, typically from about 8 to about 18 carbon atoms, and at least one contains an anionic water-solubilizing group, carboxy, sulfonate, sulfate. See U.S. Patent 3,929,678 to Laughlin et al, issued December 30, 1975 at column 19, lines 18-35 (herein incorporated by reference) for examples of ampholytic surfactants.
Zwitterionic surfactants can also be incorporated into the detergent compositions hereof. These surfactants can be broadly described as derivatives of secondary and tertiary amines, derivatives of heterocyclic secondary and tertiary amines, or derivatives of quaternary ammonium, quaternary phosphonium or tertiary sulfonium compounds. See U.S. Patent 3,929,678 to Laughlin et al, issued December 30, 1975 at column 19, line 38 through column 22, line 48 (heroin incorporated by reference) for examples of zwitterionic surfactants.
Ampholytic and zwitterionic surfactants are generally used in combination with one or more anionic and/or nonionic surfactants.
In addition to enzymes, the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, and any optional detersive surfactants, the detergents hereof can 0 include one or more other detergent adjunct materials or other materials for assisting in or enhancing cleaning performance, treatment of the substrate to be cleaned, or modify the aesthetics of the detergent composite or modify the perfumes, colorants, dyes, etc.).
Builders Detergent builders can optionally be included in the compositions hereof to assist in controlling mineral hardness.
Inorganic as well as organic builders can be used.
r -7 WO 92/0615 4 PCT/US91/07028 -23- The level of builder can vary widely depending upon the -nd use of the composition and its desired physical form. When present, the compositions will typically comprise at least about 1% builder. Liquid formulations typically comprise from about to about 50%, more typically about 5% to about 30%, by weight, of detergent builder. Granular formulations typically comprise from about 10% to about 80%, more typically from about 15% to about by weight, of the detergent builder. Lower or higher levels of builder, however, are not meant to be excluded.
Inorganic detergent builders include, but are not limited to, the alkali metal, ammonium and alkanolammonium salts of polyphosphates (exemplified by the tripolyphosphates, pyrophosphates, and glassy polymeric meta-phosphates), phosphonates, phytic acid, silicates, carbonates (including bicarbonates and sesquicarbonates), sulphates, and aluminosilicates. Borate builders, as well as builders containing borate-forming materials that can produce borate under detergent storage or wash conditions (hereinafter, collectively "borate builders"), can also be used. Preferably, non-borate builders are used in the compositions of the invention intended for use at wash conditions less than about especially less than about Examples of silicate builders are the alkali metal silicates, particularly those having a SiO2:Na2O ratio in the range 1.6:1 to 3.2:1 and layered silicates, such as the layered sodium silicates described in U.S. Patent 4,664,839, issued May 12, 1987 to H. P.
Rieck, incorporated herein by reference. However, other silicates may also be useful such as for example magnesium silicate, which can serve as a crispening agent in granular formulations, as a stabilizing agent for oxygen bleaches, and as a component of suds control systems.
Examples of carbonate builders are the alkaline earth and alkali metal carbonates, including sodium carbonate and sesquicarbonate and mixtures thereof with ultra-fine calcium carbonate as disclosed in German Patent Application No. 2,321,001 published on November 15, 1973, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
I
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -24- Aluminosilicate builders are especially useful in the present invention. Aluminosilicate builders are of great importance in most currently marketed heavy duty granular detergent compositions, and can also be a significant builder ingredient in liquid detergent formulations. Aluminosilicate builders include those Shaving the empirical formula: Mz(zAlOzySiO 2 wherein M is sodium, potassium, ammonium or substituted ammonium, j z is from about 0.5 to about 2; and y is 1; this material having a magnesium ion exchange capacity of at least about 50 milligram equivalents of CaC03 hardness per gram of anhydrous aluminosilicate. Preferred aluminosilicates are zeolite builders which have the formula: 2 )z (Si02)y]-xH 2 0 wherein z and y are integers of at least 6, the molar ratio of z to y is in the range from 1.0 to about 0.5, and x is an integer from about 15 to about 264.
Useful aluminosilicate ion exchange materials are commercially available. These aluminosilicates can be crystalline or amorphous in structure and can be naturally-occurring aluminosilicates or synthetically derived. A method for producing aluminosilicate ion exchange materials is disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,985,669, Krummel, et al, issued October 12, 1976, incorporated herein by reference. Preferred synthetic crystalline aluminosilicate ion exchange materials useful herein are available under the designations Zeolite A, Zeolite P and Zeolite X. In an especially preferred embodiment, the crystalline aluminosilicate ion exchange material has the formula: Na 12 [(A10 2 12 (SiO 2 12 wherein x is from about 20 to about 30, especially about 27. This material is known as Zeolite A. r eferably, the aluminosilicate has a particle size of about 0.1-10 microns in diameter.
X Specific examples of polyphosphates are the alkali metal tripolyphosphates, sodium, potassium and ammonium pyrophosphate, sodium and potassium and ammonium pyrophosphate, sodium and potassium orthophosphate, sodium polymeta phosphate in which the degree of polymerization ranges from about 6 to about 21, and salts of phytic acid.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 25 Examples of phosphonate builder salts are the water-soluble salts of ethane 1-hydroxy-1, 1-diphosphonate particularly the sodium and potassium salts, the water-soluble salts of methylene diphosphonic acid e.g. the trisodium and tripotassium salts and the water-soluble salts of substituted methylene diphosphonic acids, such as the trisodium and tripotassium ethylidene, isopyropylidene benzylmethylidene and halo methylidene phosphonates. Phosphonate builder salts of the aforementioned types are disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 3,159,581 and 3,213,030 issued December 1, 1964 and October 19, 1965, to Diehl; U.S.
Patent 3,422,021 issued January 14, 1969, to Roy; and U.S. Patent Nos. 3,400,148 and 3,422,137 issued September 3, 1968, and January 14, 1969 to Quimby, said disclosures being incorporated herein by reference.
Organic detergent builders suitable for the purposes of the present invention include, but are not restricted to, a wide variety of polycarboxylate compounds. As used herein, "polycarboxylate" refers to compounds having a plurality of carboxylate groups, preferably at least 3 carboxylates.
Polycarboxylate builder can generally be added to the composition in acid form, but can also be added in the form of a neutralized salt. When utilized in salt form, alkali metals, such as sodium, potassium, and lithium, or alkanolammonium salts are preferred.
Included among the polycarboxylate builders are a variety of categories of useful materials. One important category of polycarboxylate builders encompasses the ether polycarboxylates.
A number of ether polycarboxylates have been disclosed for use as detergent builders. Examples of useful ether polycarboxylates include oxydisuccinate, as disclosed in Berg, U.S. Patent 3,128,287, issued April 7, 1964, and Lamberti et al, U.S. Patent 3,635,830, issued January 18, 1972, both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
SA specific type of ether polycarboxylates useful as builders in the present invention also include those having the general formula:
CH(A)(COOX)-CH(COOX)-O-CH(COOX)-CH(COOX)(B)
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -26 wherein A is H or OH; B is H or -O-CH(COOX)-CH 2 (COOX); and X is H or a salt-forming cation. For example, if in the above general formula A and B are both H, then the compound is oxydissuccinic acid and its water-soluble salts. If A is OH and B is H, then the compound is tartrate monosuccinic acid (TMS) and its water-soluble salts. If A is H and B is -O-CH(COOX)-CH 2 (COOX), then the compound is tartrate disuccinic acid (TDS) and its water-soluble salts. Mixtures of these builders are especially preferred for use herein. Particularly preferred are mixtures of TMS and TDS in a weight ratio of TMS to TDS of from about 97:3 to about 20:80.
These builders are disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,663,071, issued to Bush et al, on May 5, 1987.
Suitable ether polycarboxylates also include cyclic compounds, particularly alicyclic compounds, such as those described in U.S. Patents 3,923,679; 3,835,163; 4,158,635; 4,120,874 and 4,102,903, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Other useful detergency builders include the ether hydroxypolycarboxylates represented by the structure: HO-[C(R)(COOM)-C(R)(COOM)-0]n-H wherein M is hydrogen or a cation wherein the resultant salt is water-soluble, preferably an alkali metal, ammonium or substituted ammonium cation, n is from about 2 to about 15 (preferably n is from about 2 to about 10, more preferably n averages from about 2 to about 4) and each R is the same or different and selected from hydrogen, C-.
4 alkyl or C-.
4 substituted alkyl (preferably R is hydrogen).
Still other ether polycarboxylates include copolymers of maleic anhydride with ethylene or vinyl methyl ether, 1, 3, benzene-2, 4, 6-trisulphonic acid, and carboxymethyloxysuccinic acid.
Organic polycarboxylate builders also include the various alkali metal, ammonium and substituted ammonium salts of polyacetic acids. Examples include the sodium, potassium, lithium, ammonium and substituted ammonium salts of ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, and nitrilotriacetic acid.
Also included are polycarboxylates such as mellitic acid, succinic acid, oxydisuccinic acid, polymaleic acid, benzene 1,3,5-tricarboxylic acid, and carboxymethyloxysuccinic acid, and soluble salts thereof.
r WO92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -27 Citrate builders, citric acid and soluble salts thereof (particularly sodium salt), are polycarboxylate builders of particular importance for heavy duty liquid detergent formulations, but can also be used in granular compositions.
Other carboxylate builders include the carboxylated carbohydrates disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,723,322, Diehl, issued March 28, 1973, incorporated herein by reference.
Also suitable in the detergent compositions of the present invention are the 3,3-dicarboxy-4-oxa-1,6-hexanedioates and the related compounds disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,566,984, Bush, issued January 28, 1986, incorporated herein by reference. Useful succinic acid builders include the C 5
-C
20 alkyl succinic acids and salts thereof. A particularly preferred compound of this type is dodecenylsuccinic acid. Alkyl succinic acids typically are of the general formula R-CH(COOH)CH 2 (CGOH) derivatives of succinic acid, wherein R is hydrocarbon, C 1 o-C 2 0 alkyl or alkenyl, preferably C 1 2
-C
16 or wherein R may be substituted with hydroxyl, sulfo, sulfoxy or sulfone substituents, all as described in the above-mentioned patents.
The succinate' builders are preferably used in the form of their water-soluble salts, including the sodium, potassium, ammonium and alkanolammonium salts.
Specific examples of succinate builders include: laurylsuccinate, myristylsuccinate, palmitylsuccinate, 2-dodecenylsuccinate (preferred), 2-pentadecenylsuccinate,.and the like. Laurylsuccinates are the preferred builders of this group, and are described in European Patent Application 86200690.5/0,200,263, published November 5, 1986.
Examples of useful builders also include sodium and potassium carboxymethyloxymalonate, carboxymethyloxysuccinate, ciscyclohexane-hexacarboxylate, cis-cyclopentane-tetracarboxylate, water-soluble polyacrylates (these polyacrylates having molecular weights to above about 2,000 can also be effectively utilized as Sdispersants), and the copolymers of maleic anhydride with vinyl methyl ether or ethylene.
Other suitable polycarboxylates are the polyacetal carboxylates disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,144,226, Crutchfield et al, issued March 13, 1979, incorporated herein by reference.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -28 These polyacetal carboxylates can be prepared by bringing together, under polymerization conditions, an ester of glyoxylic acid and a polymerization initiator. The resulting polyacetal carboxylate ester is then attached to chemically stable end groups to stabilize the polyacetal carboxylate against rapid depolymerization in alkaline solution, converted to the corresponding salt, and added to a surfactant.
Polycarboxylate builders are also disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,308,067, Diehl, issued March 7, 1967, incorporated herein by reference. Such materials include the water-soluble salts of homo- and copolymers of aliphatic carboxylic acids such as maleic acid, itaconic acid, mesaconic acid, fumaric acid, aconitic acid, citraconic acid and methylenemalonic acid.
Other organic builders known in the art can also be used.
For example, monocarboxylic acids, and soluble salts thereof, having long chain hydrocarbyls can be utilized. These would include materials generally referred to as "soaps." Chain lengths of CIo-C 20 are typically utilized. The hydrocarbyls can be saturated or unsaturated.
Bleaching Compounds Bleaching Agents and Bleach Activators The detergent compositions hereof may contain bleaching agents or bleaching compositions containing bleaching agent and one or more bleach activators. When present bleaching compounds will typically be present at levels of from about 1% to about more typically from about 1% to about 10%, of the detergent composition. In general, bleaching compounds are optional components in non-liquid formulations, granular detergents.
If present, the amount of bleach activators will typically be from about 0.1% to about 60%, more typically from about 0.5% to about 0 40% of the bleaching composition.
The bleaching agents used herein can be any of the bleaching agents useful for detergent compositions in textile cleaning, hard surface cleaning, or other cleaning purposes that are now known or become known. These include oxygen bleaches as well as other bleaching agents. For wash conditions below about especially below about 40"C, it is preferred that the compositions hereof not contain borate or material which can form borate in situ borate-forming material) under detergent storage or WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -29 wash conditions. Thus it is preferred under these conditions that a non-borate, non-borate-forming bleaching agent is used. Preferably, detergents to be used at these temperatures are substantially free of borate and borate-forming material. As used herein, "substantially free of borate and borate-forming material" shall mean that the composition contains not more than about 2% by weight of borate-containing and borate-forming material of any type, preferably, no more than more preferably 0%.
One category of bleaching agent that can be used encompasses percarboxylic acid bleaching agents and salts thereof. Suitable examples of this class of agents include magnesium monoperoxyphthalate hexahydrate, the magnesium salt of meta-chloro perbenzoic acid, 4-nonylamino-4-oxoperoxybutyric acid and diperoxydodecanedioic acid. Such bleaching agents are disclosed in U.S.
Patent 4,483,781, Hartman, issued November 20, 1984, U.S. Patent Application 740,446, Burns et al, filed June 3, 1985, European Patent Application 0,133,354, Banks et al, published February 1985, and U.S. Patent 4,412,934, Chung et al, issued November 1, 1983, all of which are incorporated by reference herein. Highly preferred bleaching agents also include 6-nonylamino-6oxoperoxycaproic acid as described in U.S. Patent 4,634,551, issued January 6, 1987 to Burns, et al, incorporated herein by reference.
Another category of bleaching agents that can be used encompasses the halogen bleaching agents. Examples of hypohalite bleaching agents, for example, include trichloro isocyanuric acid and the sodium and potassium dichloroisocyanurates and N-chloro and N-bromo alkane sulphonamides. Such materials are normally added at 0.5-10% by weight of the finished product, preferably 1-5% by weight.
Peroxygen bleaching agents can also be used. Suitable peroxygen bleaching compounds include sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate, sodium pyrophosphate peroxyhydrate, urea peroxyhydrate, and sodium peroxide.
Peroxygen bleaching agents are preferably combined with bleach activators, which lead to the in situ production in aqueous solution during the washing process) of the peroxy acid corresponding to the bleach activator.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 Preferred bleach activators incorporated into compositions of the present invention have the general formula: 0
II
R- C- L wherein R is an alkyl group containing from about 1 to about 18 carbon atoms wherein the longest linear alkyl chain extending from and including the carbonyl carbon contains from about 6 to about carbon atoms and L is a leaving group, the conjugate acid of which has a pKa in the range of from about 4 to about 13. These bleach activators are described in U.S. Patent 4,915,854, issued April 10, 1990 to Mao, et al, incorporated herein by reference, and U.S. Patent 4,412,934, which was previously incorporated herein by reference.
Bleaching agents other than oxygen bleaching agents are also known in the art and can be utilized herein. One type of nonoxygen bleaching agent of particular interest includes photoactivated bleaching agents such as the sulfonated zinc and/or aluminum phthalocyanines. These materials can be deposited upon the substrate during the washing process. Upon irradiation with light, in the presence of oxygen, such as by hanging clothes out to dry in the daylight, the sulfonated zinc phthalocyanine is activated and, consequently, the substrate is bleached. Preferred zinc phthalocyanines and a photoactivated bleaching process are described in U.S. Patent 4,033,718, issued July 5, 1977 to Holcombe et al, incorporated herein by reference. Typically, detergent compositions will contain about 0.025% to about 1.25%, by weight, of sulfonated zinc phthalocyanine.
Polymeric Soil Release Agent Any polymeric soil release agents known to those skilled in the art can be employed in the practice of this invention.
3 Polymeric soil release agents are characterized by having both iydrophilic segments, to hydrophilize the surface of hydrophobic fibers, such as polyester and nylon, and hydrophobic segments, to deposit upon hydrophobic fibers and remain adhered thereto through completion of washing and rinsing cycles and, thus, serve as an anchor for the hydrophilic segments. This can enable stains occurring subsequent to treatment with the soil release agent to be more easily cleaned in later washing procedures.
Ii WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -31 Whereas it can be beneficial to utilize polymeric soil release agents in any of the detergent compositions hereof, especially those compositions utilized for laundry or other applications wherein removal of grease and oil from hydrophobic surfaces is needed, the presence of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide in detergent compositions also containing anionic surfactants can enhance performance of many of the more commonly utilized types of polymeric soil release agents. Anionic surfactants interfere with the ability of certain soil release agents to deposit upon and adhere to hydrophobic surfaces. These polymeric soil release agents have nonionic hydrophile segments or hydrophobe segments which are anionic surfactant-interactive.
The compositions hereof for which improved polymeric soil release agent performance can be obtained through the use of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide are those which contain an anionic surfactant system, an anionic surfactant-interactive soil release agent and a soil release agent-enhancing amount of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide (PFA), wherein: anionic surfactantinteraction between the soil release agent and the anionic surfactant system of the detergent composition can be shown by a comparison of the level of soil release agent (SRA) deposition on hydrophobic fibers polyester) in aqueous solution between a "Control" run wherein deposition of the SRA of the detergent composition in aqueous solution, in the absence of the other detergent ingredients, is measured, and an "SRA/Anionic surfactant" test run wherein the same type and amount of the anionic surfactant system utilized in detergent composition is combined in aqueous solution with the SRA, at the same weight ratio of SRA to the anionic surfactant system of the detergent composition, whereby reduced deposition in relative to (A) indicates anionic-surfactant interaction; and (II) whether the detergent composition contains a soil release agent-enhancing amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide can be determined by a comparison of the SRA deposition of the SRA/Anionic surfactant test run of with soil release agent deposition in an "SRA/Anionic surfactant/PFA test run" wherein the same type and level of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide of the detergent composition is combined with the soil release agent and anionic surfactant -i i- WO 92/06154 PC/US91/07028 -32system corresponding to said SRA/Anionic surfactant test run, whereby improved deposition of the soil release agent in test run relative to test run indicates that a soil release agent-enhancing amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide is present.
For purposes hereof, the tests hereof should be conducted at anionic surfactant concentrations in the aqueous solution that are above the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the anionic surfactant and preferably above about 100 ppm. The polymeric soil release agent concentration should be at least 15 ppm. A swatch of polyester fabric should be used for the hydrophobic fiber source. Identical swatches are immersed and agitated in aqueous solutions for the respective test runs for a period of 12 minutes, then removed, and analyzed. Polymeric soil release agent deposition level can be determined by radiotagging the soil release agent prior to treatment and subsequently conducting radiochemical analysis, according to techniques known in the art.
As an alternative to the radiochemical analytical methodology discussed above, soil release agent deposition can alternately be determined in the above test runs test runs A, B, and C) by determination of ultraviolet light (UV) absorbance of the test solutions, according to techniques well known in the art.
Decreased UV absorbance in the test solution after removal of the hydrophobic fiber material corresponds to increased SRA deposition. As will be understood by those skilled in the art, UV analysis should not be utilized for test solutions containing types and levels of materials which cause excessive UV absorbance interference, such as high levels of surfactants with aromatic groups alkyl benzene sulfonates, etc.).
Thus by "soil release agent-enhancing amount" of polyhydroxy 30 fatty acid amide is meant an amount of such surfactant that will enhance deposition of the soil release agent upon hydrophobic fibers, as described above, or an amount for which enhanced grease/oil cleaning performance can be obtained for fabrics washed in the detergent composition hereof in the next subsequent cleaning operation.
The amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide needed to enhance deposition will vary with the anionic surfactant selected, the amount of anionic surfactant, the particular soil release agent I WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -33 chosen, as well as the particular polyhydroxy fatty acid amide chosen. Generally, compositions will comprise from about 0.01% to about 10%, by weight, of the polymeric soil release agent, typically From about 0.1% to about and from about 4% to about 50%, more typically from about 5% to about 30% of anionic surfactant. Such compositions should generally contain at least about preferably at least about by weight, of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, though it is not intended to necessarily be limited thereto.
The polymeric soil release agents for which performance is enhanced by polyhydroxy fatty acid amide in the presence of anionic surfactant include those soil release agents having: (a) one or more nonionic hydrophile components consisting essentially of polyoxyethylene segments with a degree of polymerization of at least 2, or (ii) oxypropylene or polyoxypropylene segments with a degree of polymerization of from 2 to 10, wherein said hydrophile segment does not encompass any oxypropylene unit unless it is bonded to adjacent moieties at each end by ether linkages, or (iii) a mixture of oxyalkylene units comprising oxyethylene and from 1 to about 30 oxypropylene units wherein said mixture contains a sufficient amount of oxyethylene units such that the hydrophile component has hydrophilicity great enough to increase the hydrophilicity of conventional polyester synthetic fiber surfaces upon deposit of the soil release agent on such surface, said hydrophile segments preferably comprising at least about oxyethylene units and more preferably, especially for such components having about 20 to 30 oxypropylene units, at least about oxyethylene units; or one or more hydrophobe components comprising C 3 oxyalkylene terephthalate segments, wherein, if said hydrophobe components also comprise oxyethylene terephthalate, the ratio of oxyethylene terephthalate:C 3 oxyalkylene terephthalate units is about 2:1 or lower, (ii) C 4
-C
6 alkylene or oxy
C
4
-C
6 alkylene segments, or mixtures thereof, (iii) poly (vinyl Sester) segments, preferably poly(vinyl acetate), having a degree of polymerization of at least 2, or (iv) C 1
-C
4 alkyl ether or C 4 hydroxyalkyl ether substituents, or mixtures thereof, wherein said substituents are present in the form of C 1
-C
4 alkyl ether or C 4 hydroxyalkyl ether cellulose derivatives, or mixtures thereof, and I
I
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -34 such cellulose derivatives are amphiphilic, whereby they have a sufficient level of Ci-C 4 alkyl ether and/or C 4 hydroxyalkyl ether units to deposit upon conventional polyester synthetic fiber surfaces and retain a sufficient level of hydroxyls, once adhered to such conventional synthetic fiber surface, to increase fiber surface hydrophilicity, or a combination of and Typically, the polyoxyethylene segments of will have a degree of polymerization of from 2 to about 200, although higher levels can be used, preferably from 3 to about 150, more preferably from 6 to about 100. Suitable oxy C 4
-C
6 alkylene hydrophobe segments include, but are not limited to, end-caps of polymeric soil release agents such as MO0S(CH 2 )nOCH 2 CH20-, where M is sodium and n is an integer from 4-6, as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,721,580, issued January 26, 1988 to Gosselink, incorporated herein by reference.
Polymeric soil release agents useful in the present invention include cellulosic derivatives such as hydroxyether cellulosic polymers, copolymeric blocks of ethylene terephthalate or propylene terephthalate with polyethylene oxide or polypropylene oxide terephthalate, and the like.
Cellulosic derivatives that are functional as soil release agents are commercially available and include hydroxyethers of cellulose such as MethocelR (Dow).
Cellulosic soil release agents for use herein also include those selected from the group consisting of Ci-C 4 alkyl and C 4 hydroxyalkyl cellulose such as methylcellulose, ethylcellulose, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, and hydroxybutyl methylcellulose.
A variety of cellulose derivatives useful as soil release polymers are disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,000,093, issued December 28, 1976 to Nicol, et al, incorporated herein by reference.
"1 Soil release agents characterized by poly(vinyl ester) hydrophobe segments include graft copolymers of poly(vinyl ester),
CI-C
6 vinyl esters, preferably poly(vinyl acetate) grafted onto polyalkylene oxide backbones, such as polyethylene oxide backbones. Such materials are known in the art and are described in European Patent Application 0 219 048, published April 22, 1987 by Kud, et al. Suitable commercially available soil release agents of this kind include the SOKALAN type of material, e.g., SOKALAN HP-22, available from BASF (West Germany).
1 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 35 One type of preferred soil release agent is a copolymer having random blocks of ethylene terephthalate and polyethylene oxide (PEO) terephthalate. More specifically, these polymers are comprised of repeating units of ethylene terephthalate and PEO terephthalate in a mole ratio of ethylene terephthalate units to PEO terephthalate units of from about 25:75 to about 35:65, said PEO terephthalate units containing polyethylene oxide having molecular weights of from about 300 to about 2000. The molecular weight of this polymeric soil release agent is in the range of from about 25,000 to about 55,000. See U.S. Patent 3,959,230 to Hays, issued May 25, 1976, which is incorporated by reference.
See also U.S. Patent 3,893,929 to Basadur issued July 8, 1975 (incorporated by reference) which discloses similar copolymers.
Another preferred polymeric soil release agent is a polyester with repeat units of ethylene terephthalate units containing 10-15% by weight of ethylene terephthalate units together with 90-80% by weight of polyoxyethylene terephthalate units, derived from a polyoxyethylene glycol of average molecular weight 300-5,000, and the mole ratio of ethylene terephthalate units to polyoxyethylene terephthalate units in the polymeric compound is between 2:1 and 6:1. Examples of this polymer- include the commercially available material ZELCON 5126 (from Dupont) and MILEASE T (from ICI). These polymers and methods of their preparation are more fully described in U.S. Patent 4,702,857, 25 issued October 27, 1987 to Gosselink, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Another preferred polymeric soil release agent is a sulfonated product of a substantially linear ester oligomer comprised of an oligomeric ester backbone of terephthaloyl and oxyalkyleneoxy repeat units and terminal moieties covalently attached to the backbone, said soil release agent being derived from allyl alcohol ethoxylate, dimethyl terephthalate, and 1,2 propylene diol, wherein after sulfonation, the terminal moieties of each oligomer have, on average, a total of from about 1 to about 4 sulfonate groups. These soil release agents are described fully in U.S. Patent 4,968,451, issued November 6, 1990 to J. J.
Scheibel and E. P. Gosselink, U.S. Serial No. 07/474,709, filed January 29, 1990, incorporated herein by reference.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 36 Other suitable polymeric soil release agents include the ethyl- or methyl-capped 1,2-propylene terephthalatepolyoxyethylene terephthalate polyesters of U.S. Patent 4,711,730, issued December 8, 1987 to Gosselink et al, the anionic endcapped oligomeric esters of U.S. Patent 4,721,580, issued January 26, 1988 to Gosselink, wherein the anionic end-caps comprise sulfo-polyethoxy groups derived from polyethylene glycol (PEG), the block polyester oligomeric compounds of U.S. Patent 4,702,857, issued October 27, 1987 to Gosselink, having polyethoxy end-caps of the formula X-(OCH 2
CH
2 wherein n is from 12 to about 43 and X is a C 1
-C
4 alkyl, or preferably methyl, all of these patents being incorporated herein by reference.
Additional polymeric soil release agents include the soil release agents of U.S. Patent 4,877,896, issued October 31, 1989 to Maldonado et al, which discloses anionic, especially sulfoaroyl, end-capped terephthalate esters, said patent being incorporated herein by reference. The terephthalate esters contain unsymmetrically substituted oxy-1,2-alkyleneoxy units.
Included among the soil release polymers of U.S. Patent 4,877,896 are materials with polyoxyethylene hydrophile components or C 3 oxyalkylene terephthalate (propylene terephthalate) repeat units within the scope of the hydrophobe components of above. It is the polymeric soil release agents characterized by either, or both, of these criteria that particularly benefit from the inclusion of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides hereof, in the j presence of anionic surfactants.
If utilized, soil release agents will generally comprise from about 0.01% to about 10.0%, by weight, of the detergent compositions herein, typically from about 0.1% to about preferably from about 0.2% to about Chelating Agents The detergent compositions herein may also optionally contain one or more iron and manganese chelating agents as a builder adjunct material. Such chelating agents can be selected from the group consisting of amino carboxylates, amino phosphonates, polyfunctionally-substituted aromatic chelating agents and mixtures thereof, all as hereinafter defined. Without intending to be bound by theory, it is believed that the benefit of these WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -37materials is due in part to their exceptional ability to remove iron and manganese ions from washing solutions by formation of soluble chelates.
Amino carboxylates useful as optional chelating agents in compositions of the invention can have one or more, preferably at least two, units of the substructure
CH
2 N (CH 2 )x COOM, wherein M is hydrogen, alkali metal, ammonium or substituted ammonium ethanolamine) and x is from 1 to about 3, preferably 1. Preferably, these amino carboxylates do not contain alkyl or alkenyl groups with more than about 6 carbon atoms.
Operable amine carboxylates include ethylenediaminetetraacetates, N-hydroxyethylethylenediaminetriacetates, nitrilotriacetates, ethylenediamine tetraproprionates, triethylenetetraaminehexaacetates, diethylenetriaminepentaacetates, and ethanoldiglycines, alkali metal, ammonium, and substituted ammonium salts thereof and mixtures thereof.
Amino phosphonates are also suitable for use as chelating agents in the compositions of the invention when at least low levels of total phosphorus are permitted in detergent compositions. Compounds with one or more, preferably at least two, units of the substructure
CH~
2 i N (CH 2 )x P0 3
M
2 wherein M is hydrogen, alkali metal, ammonium or substituted ammonium and x is from 1 to about 3, preferably 1, are useful and include ethylenediaminetetrakis (methylenephosphonates), nitrilotris (methylenephosphonates) and diethylenetriaminepentakis (methylenephosphonates). Preferably, these amino phosphonates do not contain alkyl or alkenyl groups with more than about 6 carbon atoms. Alkylene groups can be shared by substructures.
Polyfunctionally substituted aromatic chelating agents are also useful in the compositions herein. These materials can comprise compounds having the general formula
I
r WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 38
OH
R OH
I
5 R wherein at least one R is -S0 3 H or -COOH or soluble salts thereof and mixtures thereof. U.S. Patent 3,812,044, issued May 21, 1974, to Connor et al, incorporated herein by reference, discloses polyfunctionally substituted aromatic chelating and sequestering agents. Preferred compounds of this type in acid form are dihydroxydisulfobenzenes such as 1,2-dihydroxy disulfobenzene. Alkaline detergent compositions can contain these materials in the form of alkali metal, ammonium or substituted ammonium mono-or triethanol-amine) salts.
If utilized, these chelating agents will generally comprise from about 0.1% to about 10% by weight of the detergent compositions herein. More preferably chelating agents will comprise from about 0.1% to about 3.0% by weight of such compositions.
Clay Soil Removal/Anti-redeposition Aents The compositions of the present invention can also optionally contain water-soluble ethoxylated amines having clay soil removal and anti-redeposition properties. Granular detergent compositions which contain these compounds typically contain from about 0.01% to about 10.0% by weight of the water-soluble ethoxylated amines; 25 liquid detergent compositions, typically about 0.01% to about These compounds are selected preferably from the group consisting of: ethoxylated monoamines having the formula: ethoxylated diamines having the formula:
R
2
-N-RI-N-R
2
(R
2 2
N-(R
2 2 I t I L L L X X X or (X-L-)2-N-R1-N-(R2)2 ethoxylated polyamines having the formula:
R
2
R
3 f 1 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -39ethoxylated amine polymers having the general formula: R2
[(R
2 )2-N]wER -NlxER -N]yER-N-L-X)z
L
X
and mixtures thereof; wherein A 1 is 0 0 0 0 0 n IM II I1
II
-NCO-, -NCN-, -OCN-, R R R R R R 0 0 0 00 II 1 It 11 i OO-, -CNC-,
R
or R is H or C 1
-C
4 alkyl or hydroxyalkyl; R 1 is C 2
-C
1 2 alkylene, hydroxyalkylene, alkenylene, arylene or alkarylene, or a
C
2
-C
3 oxyalkylene moiety having from 2 to about 20 oxyalkylene units provided that no 0-N bonds are formed; each R 2 is C 1
-C
4 or hydroxyalkyl, the moiety or two R 2 together form the moiety
-(CH
2
-A
2
-(CH
2 wherein A 2 is or -CH 2 r is 1 or 2, s is 1 or 2, and r s is 3 or 4; X is a nonionic group, an anionic group or mixture thereof; R 3 is a substituted C 3 -Cz 2 alkyl, hydroxyalkyl, alkenyl, aryl, or alkaryl group having substitution sites; R 4 is C 1
-C
1 2 alkylene, hydroxyalkylene, alkenylene, arylene or alkarylene, or a C 2
-C
3 oxyalkylene moiety having from 2 to about 20 oxyalkylene units provided that no 0-0 or 0-N bonds are formed; L is a hydrophilic chain which contains the polyoxyalkylene moiety 5 0)m(CH 2 CH20)n]-, wherein R 5 is C 3
-C
4 alkylene or hydroxyalkylene and m and n are numbers such that the moiety -(CH2CH20)n- comprises at least about 50% by weight of said polyoxyalkylene moiety; for said monoamines, m is from 0 to about 4, and n is at least about 12; for said diamines, m is from 0 to about 3, and n is at least about 6 when R 1 is C 2
-C
3 alkylene, hydroxyalkylene, or alkenylene, and at least about 3 when R 1 is other than C 2
-C
3 alkylene, hydroxyalkylene or alkenylene; for said polymiines and amine polymers, m is from 0 to about 10 and n is at least about 3; p is from 3 to 8; q is I or 0; t is 1 or 0, provided that t is 1 when q is 1; w is 1 or 0; x y z is at least 2; and y z is at least 2. The most preferred soil release i I i-i 1- WO 92/06154 PC/US91/07028 40 and anti-redeposition agent is ethoxylated tetraethylenepentamine.
Exemplary ethoxylated amines are further described in U.S. Patent 4,557,898, VanderMeer, issued July 1, 1986, incorporated herein by reference. Another group of preferred clay soil removal/antiredeposition agents are the cationic compounds disclosed in European Patent Application 111,965, Oh and Gosselink, published June 27, 1984, incorporated herein by reference. Other clay soil removal/antiredeposition agents which can be used include the ethoxylated amine polymers disclosed in European Patent Application 111,984, Gosselink, published June 27, 1984; the zwitterionic polymers disclosed in European Patent Application 112,592, Gosselink, published July 4, 1984; and the amine oxides disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,548,744, Connor, issued October 22, 1985, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Other clay soil removal and/or anti redeposition agents known in the art can also be utilized in the compositions hereof.
Another type of preferred anti-redeposition agent includes the carboxy methyl cellulose (CMC) materials. These materials are well known in the art.
Polymeric Dispersing Agents Polymeric dispersing agents can advantageously be utilized in the compositions hereof. These materials can aid in calcium and magnesium hardness control. Suitable polymeric dispersing agents include polymeric polycarboxylates and polyethylene glycols, although others known in the art can also be used. It is believed, though it is not intended to be limited by theory, that polymeric dispersing agents enhance overall detergent builder performance, when used in combination with other builders (including lower molecular weight polycarboxylates) by crystal growth inhibition, particulate soil release peptization, and anti-redeposition.
Polycarboxylate materials which can be employed as the polymeric dispersing agent herein are these polymers or copolymers which contain at least about 60% by weight of segments with the general formula I L S. nmn n WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -41 SX Z I I C C I I Y COOM n wherein X, Y, and Z are each selected from the group consisting of hydrogen, methyl, carboxy, carboxymethyl, hydroxy and hydroxymethyl; a salt-forming cation and n is from about 30 to about 400.
Preferably, X is hydrogen or hydroxy, Y is hydrogen or carboxy, Z is hydrogen and M is hydrogen, alkali metal, ammonia or substituted ammonium.
Polymeric polycarboxylate materials of this type can be prepared by polymerizing or copolymerizing suitable unsaturated monomers, preferably in their acid form. Unsaturated monomeric acids that can be polymerized to form suitable polymeric polycarboxylates include acrylic acid, maleic acid (or maleic anhydride), fumaric acid, itaconic acid, aconitic acid, mesaconic acid, citraconic acid and methylenemalonic acid. The presence in the polymeric polycarboxylates herein of monomeric segments, containing no carboxylate radicals such as vinylmethyl ether, styrene, ethylene, etc. is suitable provided that such segments do not constitute more than about 40% by weight.
Particularly suitable polymeric polycarboxylates can be derived from acrylic acid. Such acrylic acid-based polymers which are useful herein are the water-soluble salts of polymerized acrylic acid. The average molecular weight of such polymers in the acid form preferably ranges from about 2,000 to 10,000, more preferably from about 4,000 to 7,000 and most preferably from about 4,000 to 5,000. Water-soluble salts of such acrylic acid polymers can include, for example, the alkali metal, ammonium and substituted ammonium salts. Soluble polymers of this type are known materials. Use of polyacrylates of this type in detergent t compositions has been disclosed, for example, in Diehl, U.S.
Patent 3,308,067, issued March 7, 1967. This patent is incorporated herein by.reference.
I
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 42- Acrylic/maleic-based copolymers may also be used as a preferred component of the dispersing/anti-redeposition agent.
Such materials include the water-soluble salts of copolymers of acrylic acid and maleic acid. The average molecular weight of such copolymers in the acid form preferably ranges from about 2,000 to 100,000, more preferably from about 5,000 to 75,000, most preferably from about 7,000 to 65,000. The ratio of acrylate to Imaleate segments in such copolymers will generally range from about 30:1 to about 1:1, more preferably from about 10:1 to 2:1.
Water-soluble salts of such acrylic acid/maleic acid copolymers can include, for example, the alkali metal, ammonium and substituted ammonium salts. Soluble acrylate/maleate copolymers of this type are known materials which are described in European Patent Application No. 66915, published December 15, 1982, which publication is incorporated herein by reference.
Another polymeric material which can be included is polyethylene glycol (PEG). PEG can exhibit dispersing agent performance as well as act as a clay soil removal/antiredeposition agent.
Typical molecular weight ranges for these purposes range from about 500 to about 100,000, preferably from about 1,000 to about 50,000, more preferably from about 1,500 to about 10,000.
Briqhtener Any optical brighteners or other brightening or whitening agents known in the art can be incorporated into the detergent compositions hereof.
The choice of brightener for use in detergent compositions will depend upon a number of faci.ors, such as the type of detergent, the nature of other components present in the detergent composition, the temperatures of wash water, the degree of agitation, and the ratio of the material washed to tub size.
The brightener selection is also dependent upon the type of Smaterial to be cleaned, cottons, synthetics, etc. Since most laundry detergent products are used to clean a variety of fabrics, the detergent compositions should contain a mixture of brighteners which will be effective for a variety of fabrics. It is of course necessary that the individual components of such a brightener mixture be compatible.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 43- Commercial optical brighteners which may be useful in the present invention can be classified into subgroups which include, but are not necessarily limited to, derivatives of stilbene, pyrazoline, coumarin, carboxylic acid, methinecyanines, dibenzothiphene-5,5-dioxide, azoles, 5- and 6-membered-ring heterocycles, and other miscellaneous agents. Examples of such brighteners are disclosed in "The Production and Application of Fluorescent Brightening Agents", M. Zahradnik, Published by John Wiley Sons, New York (1982), the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Stilbene derivatives which may be useful in the present invention include, but are not necessarily limited to, derivatives of bis(triazinyl)amino-stilbene; bisacylamino derivatives of stilbene; triazole derivatives of stilbene; oxadiazole derivatives of stilbene; oxazole derivatives of stilbene; and styryl derivatives of stilbene.
Certain derivatives of bis(triazinyl)aminostilbene which may be useful in the present invention may be prepared from 4,4'diamine-stilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid.
Coumarin derivatives which may be useful in the present invention include, but are not necessarily limited to, derivatives substituted in the 3-position, in the 7-position, and in the 3and 7-positions.
Carboxylic acid derivatives which may be useful in the present invention include, but are not necessarily limited to, fumaric acid derivatives; benzoic acid derivatives; p-phenylenebis-acrylic acid derivatives; naphthalenedicarboxylic acid derivatives; heterocyclic acid derivatives; and cinnamic acid derivatives.
0 Cinnamic acid derivatives which may be useful in the present invention can be further subclassified into groups which include, but are not necessarily limited to, cinnamic acid derivatives, styrylazoles, styrylbenzofurans, styryloxadiazoles, styryltriazoles, and styrylpolyphenyls, as disclosed on page 77 of the Zahradnik reference.
The styrylazoles can be further subclassified into styrylbenzoxazoles, styrylimidazoles and styrylthiazoles, as disclosed on page 78 of the Zahradnik reference. It will be understood that I WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 44 these three identified subclasses may not necessarily reflect an exhaustive list of subgroups into which styrylazoles may be subclassified.
Another class of optical brighteners which may be useful in the present invention are the derivatives of dioxide disclosed at page 741-749 of The Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, Volume 3, pages 737-750 (John Wiley Son, Inc., 1962), the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, and include 3,7-diaminodibenzothiophene-2,8-disulfonic acid 5,5 dioxide.
Another class of optical brighteners which may be useful in the present invention include azoles, which are derivatives of ring heterocycles. These can be further subcategorized into monoazoles and bisazoles. Examples of monoazoles and bisazoles are disclosed in the Kirk-Othmer reference.
Another class of brighteners which may be useful in the present invention are the derivatives of 6-membered-ring heterocycles disclosed in the Kirk-Othmer reference. Examples of such compounds include brighteners derived from pyrazine and brighteners derived from 4-aminonaphthalamide.
In addition to the brighteners already described, miscellaneous agents may also be useful as brighteners. Examples of such miscellaneous agents are disclosed at pages 93-95 of the Zahradnik reference, and include 1-hydroxy-3,6,8-pyrenetrisulphonic acid; 2,4-dimethoxy-1,3,5-triazin-6-yl-pyrene; phenylimidazolonedisulphonic acid; and derivatives of pyrazolinequinoline.
Other specific examples of optical brighteners which may be useful in the present invention are those identified in U.S.
Patent 4,790,856, issued to Wixon on December 13, 1988, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. These 1 brighteners include the PHORWHITE series of brighteners from Verona. Other brighteners disclosed in this reference include: Tinopal UNPA, Tinopal CBS and Tinopal 5BM; available from Ciba-Geigy; Arctic White CC and Artic White CWD, available from Hilton-Davis, located in Italy; the 2-(4-styryl-piheyl)-2Hnaphthol[1,2-d]triazoles; 4,4'-bis- (1,2,3-triazol-2-y1)-stilbenes; 4,4'-bis(styryl)bisphenyls; and the y-arminocoumarins.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 45 Specific examples of these brighteners include 4-methyl-7-diethylamino coumarin; 1,2-bis(-benzimidazol-2-yl)ethylene; 1,3-diphenylphrazolines; 2,5-bis(benzoxazol-2-yl)thiophene; 2-styryl-naphth- [1,2-d]oxazole; and 2-(stilbene-4-yl)-2H-naphtho- [l,2-d]triazole.
Other optical brighteners which may be useful in the present invention include those disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,646,015, issued February 29, 1972 to Hamilton, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Suds Suppressors Compounds known, or which become known, for reducing or suppressing the formation of suds can be incorporated into the compositions of the present invention. The incorporation of such materials, hereinafter "suds suppressors," can be desirable because the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactants hereof can increase suds stability of the detergent compositions. Suds suppression can be of particular importance when the detergent compositions include a relatively high sudsing surfactant in combination with the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant.
Suds suppression is particularly desirable for compositions intended for use in front loading automatic washing machines.
These machines are typically characterized by having drums, for containing the laundry and wash water, which have a horizontal axis and rotary action about the axis. This type of agitation can result in high suds formation and, consequently, in reduced cleaning performance. The use of suds suppressors can also be of particular importance under hot water washing conditions and under high surfactant concentration conditions.
A wide variety of materials may be used as suds suppressors in the compositions hereof. Suds suppressors are well known to those skilled in the art. They are generally described, for example, in Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, Third Edition, Volume 7, pages 430-447 (John Wiley Sons, Inc., 1979).
One category of suds suppressor of particular interest encompasses monocarboxylic fatty acids and soluble salts thereof. These materials are discussed in U.S. Patent 2,954,347, issued September 27, 1960 to Wayne St. John, said patent being incorporated herein by reference. The monocarboxylic fatty acids, and salts thereof, for use as suds suppressor typically have hydrocarbyl chains of t WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -46 to about 24 carbon atoms, preferably 12 to 18 carbon atoms.
Suitable salts include the alkali metal salts such as sodium, potassium, and lithium salts, and ammonium and alkanolammonium salts. These materials are a preferred category of suds suppressor for detergent compositions.
The detergent compositions may also contain non-surfactant suds suppressors. These include, for example, list: high molecular weight hydrocarbons such as paraffin, fatty acid esters fatty acid triglycerides), fatty acid esters of monovalent alcohols, aliphatic C 18
-C
4 o ketones stearone), etc. Other suds inhibitors include N-alkylated amino triazines such as trito hexa-alkylmelamines or di- to tetra-alkyldiamine chlortriazines formed as products of cyanuric chloride with two or three moles of a primary or secondary amine containing 1 to 24 carbon atoms, propylene oxide, and monostearyl phosphates such as monostearyl alcohol phosphate ester and monostearyl di-alkali metal K, Na, and Li) phosphates and phosphate esters. The hydrocarbons such as paraffin and haloparaffin can be utilized in liquid form.
The liquid hydrocarbons will be liquid at room temperature and atmospheric pressure, and will have a pour point in the range of about -40'C and about 5'C, and a minimum boiling point not less than about 110'C (atmospheric pressure). It is also known to utilize waxy hydrocarbons, preferrably having a melting point below about 100'C. The hydrocarbons constitute a preferred category of suds suppressor for detergent compositions.
Hydrocarbon suds suppressors are described, for example, in U.S.
Patent 4,265,779, issued May 5, 1981 to Gandolfo, et al, incorporated herein by reference. The hydrocarbons, thus, include aliphatic, alicyclic, aromatic, and heterocyclic saturated or unsaturated hydrocarbons having from about 12 to about 70 carbon atoms. The term "paraffin," as used in this suds suppressor discussion, is intended to include mixtures of true paraffins and cyclic hydrocarbons.
Another preferred category of non-surfactant suds comprises silicone suds suppressors. This category includes the use of polyorganosiloxane oils, such as polydimethylsiloxane, dispersions or emulsions of polyorganosiloxane oils or resins, and combinations of polyorganosiloxane with silica particles wherein the WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -47polyorganosiloxane is chemisorbed of fused onto the silica.
Silicone suds suppressors are well known in the art and are, for example, disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,265,779, issued May 5, 1981 to Gandolfo et al and European Patent Application No. 89307851.9, published February 7, 1990, by Starch, M. both incorporated herein by reference.
Other silicone suds suppressors are disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,455,839 which relates to compositions and processes for defoaming aqueous solutions by incorporating therein small amounts of polydimethylsiloxane fluids.
Mixtures of silicone and silanated silica are described, for instance, in German Patent Application DOS 2,124,526. Silicone defoamers and suds controlling agents in granular detergent compositions are disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,933,672, Bartolotta et al, and in U.S. Patent 4,652,392, Baginski et al, issued March 24, 1987.
An exemplary silicone based suds suppressor for use herein is a suds suppressing amount of a suds controlling agent consisting essentially of: polydimethylsiloxane fluid having a viscosity of from about 20 cs. to about 1500 cs. at (ii) from about 5 to about 50 parts per 100 parts by weight of of siloxane resin composed of (CH 3 3 Si0 1 /2 units of Si0 2 units in a ratio of from (CH 3 3 Si0 1 /2 units and to SiO 2 units of from about 0.6:1 to about 1.2:1; and (iii) from about 1 to about 20 parts per 100 parts by weight of of a solid silica gel; For any detergent compositions to be used in automatic laundry washing machines, suds should not form to the extent that they overflow the washing machine. Suds suppressors, when utilized, are preferably present in a "suds suppressing amount." By "suds suppressing amount" is meant that the formulator of the composition can select an amount of this suds controlling agent that will sufficiently control the suds to result in a low-sudsing laundry detergent for use in automatic laundry washing machines.
7 WO 92/06154 PCF/US91/07028 48- The amount of suds control will vary with the detergent surfactants selected. For example, with high sudsing surfactants, relatively more of the suds controlling agent is used to achieve the desired suds control than with lesser foaming surfactants. In general, a sufficient amount of suds suppressor should be incorporated in low sudsing detergent compositions so that the suds that form during the wash cycle of the automatic washing machine upon agitation of the detergent in aqueous solution under the intended wash temperature and concentration conditions) do not exceed about 75% of the void volume of washing machine's containment drum, preferably the suds do not exceed about 50% of said void volume, wherein the void volume is determined as the difference between total volume of the containment drum and the volume of the water plus the laundry.
The compositions hereof will generally comprise from 0% to about 5% of suds suppressor. When utilized as suds suppressors, monocarboxylic fatty acids, and salts thereof, will be present typically in amounts up to about by weight, of the detergent composition. Preferably, from about 0.5% to about 3% of fatty monocarboxylate suds suppressor is utilized. Silicone suds suppressors are typically utilized in amounts up to about by weight, of the detergent composition, although higher amounts may d be used. This upper limit is practical in nature, due primarly to concern with keeping costs minimized and effectiveness of lower amounts for effectively controlling sudsing. Preferably from about 0.01% to about 1% of silicone suds suppressor is used, more preferably from about 0.25% to about As used herein, these weight percentage values include any silica that may be utilized in combination with polyorganosiloxane, as well as any adjunct materials that may be utilized. Monostearyl phosphates are generally utilized in amounts ranging from about 0.1% to about 2%, W by weight, of the composition.
Hydrocarbon suds suppressors are typically utilized in amounts ranging from about .01% to about although higher levels can be used.
4. i WO 92/06154 P~/US91/07028 -49- Other Ingredients A wide variety of other ingredients useful in detergent compositions can be included in the compositions hereof, including other active ingredients, carriers, hydrotropes, processing aids, dyes or pigments, solvents for liquid formulations, etc.
Liquid detergent compositions can contain water and other solvents as carriers. Low molecular weight primary or secondary alcohols exemplified by methanol, ethanol, propanol, and isopropanol are suitable. Monohydric alcohols are preferred for solubilizing surfactant, but polyols such as those containing from 2 to about 6 carbon atoms and from 2 to about 6 hydroxy groups propylene glycol, ethylene glycol, glycerine, and 1,2-propanediol) can also be used.
The detergent compositions hereof will preferably be formulated such that during use in aqueous cleaning operations, the wash water will have a pH of between about 6.5 and about 11, preferably between about 7.5 and about 10.5. Liquid product formulations preferably have a pH between about 7.5 and about more preferably between about 7.5 and about 9.0. Techniques for controlling pH at recommended usage levels include the use of buffers, alkalis, acids, etc., and are well known to those skilled in the art.
This invention further provides a method for improving the performance of detergents containing anionic, nonionic, and/or cationic surfactant, and detersive enzyme, by utilizing therein an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactant described above, typically at least about 1% of such surfactant.
This invention further provides a method for cleaning substrates, such as fibers, fabrics, hard surfaces, skin, etc., by contacting said substrate, with a detergent composition comprising detersive enzyme and one or more anionic, nonionic, or cationic surfactants, wherein said detergent composition contains an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, typically at least about by weight, of the composition, in the presence of a solvent such as water or water-miscible solvent primary and secondary alcohols). Agitation is preferably provided for enhancing cleaning. Suitable means for providing WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 agitation include rubbing by hand or preferably with use of a brush, sponge, cloth, mop, or other cleaning device, automatic laundry washing machines, automatic dishwashers, etc.
EXPERIMENTAL
This exemplifies a process for making a N-methyl, 1-deoxyglucityl lauramide surfactant for use herein. Although a skilled chemist can vary apparatus configuration, one suitable apparatus for use herein comprises a three-liter four-necked flask fitted with a motor-driven paddle stirrer and a thermometer of length sufficient to contact the reaction medium. The other two necks of the flask are fitted with a nitrogen sweep and a wide-bore side-arm (caution: a wide-bore side-arm is important in case of very rapid methanol evolution) to which is connected an efficient collecting condenser and vacuum outlet. The latter is connected to a nitrogen bleed and vacuum gauge, then to an aspirator and a trap. A 500 watt heating mantle with a variable transformer temperature controller ("Variac") used to heat the reaction is so placed on a lab-jack that it may be readily raised or lowered to further control temperature of the reaction.
N-methylglucamine (195 1.0 mole, Aldrich, M4700-0) and methyl laurate (Procter Gamble CE 1270, 220.9 1.0 mole) are placed in a flask. The solid/liquid mixture is heated with stirring under a nitrogen sweep to form a melt (approximately minutes). When the melt temperature reaches 145' C, catalyst (anhydrous powdered sodium carbonate, 10.5 0.1 mole, J. T.
Baker) is added. The nitrogen sweep is shut off and the aspirator and nitrogen bleed are adjusted to give 5 inches (5/31 atm.) Hg.
vacuum. From this point on, the reaction temperature is held at 150 C by adjusting the Variac and/or by raising or lowering the mantle.
SWithin 7 minutes, first methanol bubbles are sighted at the meniscus of the reaction mixture. A vigorous reaction soon follows. Methanol is distilled over until its rate subsides. The vacuum is adjusted to give about 10 inches Hg. (10/31 atm.) vacuum. The vacuum is increased approximately as follows (in inches Hg. at minutes): 10 at 3, 20 at 7, 25 at 10. 11 minutes from the onset of methanol evolution, heating and stirring are discontinued co-incident with some foaming. The product is cooled and solidifies.
Lt i .i WO 92/06154 PCTUS9/07028 515 The following examples are meant to exemplify compositions of the present invention, but are not necessarily meant to limit or otherwise define the scope of the invention, said scope being determined according to claims which follow.
EXAMPLES I-III These examples show heavy compositions cointaining polyhydroxy fa enzymes.
Base Granule C14-s Alkyl Sulfate
C
1 4-s 1 Alkyl Ethoxylate (2.25) Sulfate N-Methyl N-1-Deoxyglucityl Cocoamide Zeolite A Sodium Citrate Sodium Carbonate Sodium Silicate Sodium Sulfate Sodium Polyacrylate (4500 MW) Polyethyelene Glycol (8000 MW) Tallow Fatty Acid Brightener Admix and Spray-on duty granular detergent tty acid amide and protease
I
16.9 5.6 30.1 16.9 5.6 15.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2
II
16.9 5.6 18.8 11.3 16.9 5.6 15.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2
III
16.9 5.6 18.8 11.3 16.9 5.6 15.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2 Protease active enzyme) 2.1 0.9 0.9 Perfume 0.3 0.3 0.3
C
12 13 Alkyl Ethoxylate (6.5 mole) 1.1 1.1 1.1 Water and Miscellaneous 3.8 3.8 3.8 100.0 100.0 100.0 Examples I-III are formulations for preferred use of about 1400 ppm, wash water weight basis, for temperatures below about 50*C, The above examples are made by combining the base granule ingredients as a slurry, and spray drying to about 4-8% residual moisture. The remaining dry ingredients are admixed in granular or powder form with the spray dryed granule in a rotary mixing drum, and the liquid ingredients (nonionic surfactant and perfume) sprayed on.
EXAMPLES IV-IX The following examples demonstrate heavy duty liquid compositions containing polyhydroxy fatty acid amides and protease and amylase enzymes.
ii i i-car WO 92/06154 P(7r//US91/07028 51 The following examples are meant to exemplify compositions of the present invention, but are not necessarily meant to limit or otherwise define the scope of the invention, said scope being determined according to claims which follow.
EXAMPLES I-III i ii Ii
I
These examples show heavy compositions containing polyhydroxy fa enzymes.
Base Granule
C
14 1 Alkyl Sulfate
C
14 5 Alkyl Ethoxylate (2.25) Sulfate N-Methyl N-1-Deoxyglucityl Cocoamide Zeolite A Sodium Citrate 15 Sodium Carbonate Sodium Silicate Sodium Sulfate Sodium Polyacrylate (4500 MW) Polyethyelene Glycol (8000 MW) Tallow Fatty Acid Brightener Admix and Spray-on
I
16.9 5.6 30.1 16.9 5.6 15.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2
II
16.9 5.6 18.8 11.3 16.9 5.6 15.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2
III
16.9 5.6 18.8 11.3 16.9 5.6 15.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 0.2 duty granular detergent tty acid amide and protease Protease active enzyme) 2.1 0.9 0.9 Perfume 0.3 0.3 0.3
C
12 13 Alkyl Ethoxylate (6.5 mole) 1.1 1.1 1.1 Water and Miscellaneous 3.8 3.8 3.8 100.0 100.0 100.0 Examples I-III are formulations for preferred use of about 1400 ppm, wash water weight basis, for temperatures below about 50*C. The above examples are made by combining the base granule ingredients as a slurry, and spray drying to about 4-8% residual moisture. The remaining dry ingredients are admixed in granular or powder form with the spray dryed granule in a rotary mixing drum, and the liquid ingredients (nonionic surfactant and perfume) sprayed on.
EXAMPLES IV-IX The following examples demonstrate heavy duty liquid compositions containing polyhydroxy fatty acid amides and protease and amylase enzymes.
'^I
I
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -52- Ingredients IV V VI N-Methyl N-1-Deoxyglucityl Cocoamide 10.0 5.5
C
12 -13 Alkyl Ethoxylate (6.5 mole) 15.0 2.5
C
14 -s 1 Alkyl Ethoxylate (2.25) Sulfate 17.0 17.0
C
12 14 Fatty Acid 3.0 3.0 Dodecyl Trimethyl Ammonium Chloride 0.2 0.2 0.2 Citric Acid 1.0 1.0 Monoethanolamine 2.5 2.5 Ethoxylated Tetraethylenepentamine 1.5 1.5 Protease active) 0.4 0.5 0.4 Amylase (11.5% active) 0.2 Miscellaneous and solvents balance balance balance 100.0 100.0 100.0 Ingredients VII VIII IX N-Methyl N-1-Deoxyglucityl Cocoamide 4.2 3.1 3.1
C
14 15 Alkyl Ethoxylate (2.25) Sulfate 12.6 9.3 C12-18 Alkyl Ethoxylate Sulfate 6.2
C
12 14 Alkyl Sulfate 3.1
C
12 -1 4 Alkyl Ethoxylate 3.4 Dodecyl Trimethyl Ammonium Chloride Dodecenyl Succinate Citrate 3.4 15.0 TMS/TDS (80/20) 3.4
C
1 2- 14 Fatty Acid Oxydisuccinate 20.0 Ethoxylated Tetraethylene Pentamine Polyacrylate (4500 MW) 1.5 Protease active) 0.5 0.2 0.2 Amylase (11.5% active) 0.2 Miscellaneous and solvents balance balance balance 100.0 100.0 100.0 TMS/TDS is tartrate monosuccinate/tartrate disuccinate Examples IV-IX are preferably used about 2000 ppm, wash water weight basis, for wash temperatures below about Examples IV-IX are prepared by combining non-aqueous solvents, aqueous surfactant pastes or solutions, melted fatty acids, aqueous solutions of polycarboxylate builders and other salts, aqueous ethoxylated tetraethylenpentamine, buffering WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -53 agents, caustic, and the remaining water. The pH is adjusted using either an aqueous citric acid solution sodium hydroxide solution to about pH 8.5. After pH adjustment, the final ingredients, such as soil release agents, enzymes, colorants, and perfume, are added and the mixture stirred until a single phase is achieved.
EXAMPLE X An alternate and highly preferred method for preparing the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides used herein is as follows. A reaction mixture consisting of 84.87g. fatty acid methyl ester (source: Procter Gamble methyl ester CE1270), 75g. N-methyl- D-glucamine (source: Aldrich Chemical Company M4700-0), 1.04g.
sodium methoxide (source: Aldrich Chemical Company 16,499-2), and 68.51g. methyl alcohol is used. The reaction vessel comprises a standard reflux set-up fitted with a drying tube, condenser and stir bar. In this procedure, the N-methyl glucamine is combined with methanol with stirring under argon and heating is begun with good mixing (stir bar; reflux). After 15-20 minutes, when the solution has reached the desired temperature, the ester and sodium methoxide catalyst are added. Samples are taken periodically to monitor the course of the reaction, but it is noted that the solution is completely clear by 63.5 minutes. It is judged that the reaction is, in fact, nearly complete at that point. The reaction mixture is maintained at reflux for 4 hours. After removal of the methanol, the recovered crude product weighs 156.16 grams. After vacuum drying and purification, an overall yield of 106.92 grams purified product is recovered. However, percentage yields are not calculated on this basis, inasmuch as regular sampling throughout the course of the reaction makes an overall percentage yield value meaningless. The reaction can be carried out at 80% and 90% reactant concentrations for periods up to 6 hours to yield products with extremely small by-product formation.
A modern, condensed laundry detergent granule is as follows.
EXAMPLE XI Ingredient Wt.%
C
1 4-Is alkyl alcohol sulfonic acid 13
C
1 4 1 5 alkyl polyethoxy (2.25) sulfonic acid 5.60
C
1 2 1 3 alkyl polyethoxylate 1.45 '1 l WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 54 Cz 2 -1 4 fatty acid N-methyl glucamide 2.50 Sodium aluminosilicate (as hydrated Zeolite A) 25.2 Crystalline layered silicate builder 1 23.3 Citric acid 10.0 Sodium carbonate To get wash pH 9.90 Sodium polyacrylate 2000-4500) 3.2 Diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid 0.45 d Savinase 2 0.70 6-Nonanoylamino-6-oxo-peroxycaproic acid 7.40 Sodium perborate monohydrate 2.10 Nonanoyloxybenzene sulfonic acid 5.00 Brightener 0.10 1 Layered silicate builders are known in the art. Preferred are the layered sodium silicates. See, for example, the layered sodium silicate builders of U.S. Patent 4,664,859, issued May 12, 1987 to H. P. Rieck, incorporated herein by reference. A suitable layered silicate builder is available as SKS-6 from Hoechst.
2Avai'lable from Novo Nordisk A/S, Copenhagen.
Highly preferred granules of the foregoing types are those which comprise from about 0.0001% to about 2% by weight of active enzyme and at least about 1% by weight of said polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, and, most preferably, wherein the anionic surfactant is not an alkylbenzene sulfonate surfactant.
The following relates to the preparation of a preferred liquid heavy duty laundry detergent according to this invention.
It will be appreciated that the stability of enzymes in such compositions is considerably less than in granular detergents.
However, by using typical enzyme stabilizers such as formate and boric acid, lipase and cellulase enzymes can be protected from degradation by protease enzymes. However, lipase stability is still relatively poor in the presence of alkylbenzene sulfonate surfactants. Apparently, LAS partially denatures lipase, and, further, it seems that denatured lipase is more vulnerable to attack by protease.
In view of the foregoing considerations, which, as noted, can be particularly troublesome in liquid compositions, it is a challenge to provide liquid detergent compositions containing 1^_ WO 92/0615 4 PCT/US91/07028 lipase, protease and cellulase enzymes, together. It is particularly challenging to provide such tertiary enzyme systems in stable liquid detergents together with an effective blend of detersive surfactants. Additionally, it is difficult to incorporate peroxidase and/or amylase enzymes stably in such compositions.
It has now been determined that various mixtures of lipases, proteases, cellulases, amylases and peroxidases are adequately stable in the presence of certain non-alkylbenzene sulfonate surfactant systems, such that effective, heavy-duty solid and even liquid detergents can be formulated. Indeed, the formulation of stable, liquid, enzyme-containing detergent compositions constitutes a highly advantageous and preferred embodiment afforded by the technology of the present invention.
In particular, prior art liquid detergent compositions typically contain LAS or mixtures of LAS with surfactants of the RO(A)mSO 3 M type noted hereinabove, LAS/AES mixtures.
By contrast, the liquid detergents herein preferably comprise binary mixtures of the AES and polyhydroxy fatty acid amides of the type disclosed herein. While minimal amounts of LAS can be present, it will be appreciated that the stability of the enzymes will be lessened thereby. Accordingly, it is preferred that the liquid compositions be substantially free contain less than about 10%, preferably less than about more preferably less than about most preferably of LAS.
The present invention provides a liquid detergent composition comprising: from about 1% to about 50%, preferably from about 4% to about 40%, of anionic surfactant; from about 0.0001% to about 2% of active detersive enzyme; an enzyme performance-enhancing amount (preferably from about 0.5% to about 12%) of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula 0 RI
R
2 C N Z wherein R 1 is H 1 Ci-C 4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is Cs-C31 i WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 56 hydrocarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxylhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof; and wherein the composition is substantially free of alkylbenzene sulfonate.
The water-soluble anionic surfactant herein preferably comprises RO(A)m S03 M wherein R is an unsubstituted Cio-C 24 alkyl or hydroxyalkyl (Co 1
-C
24 group, A is an ethoxy or propoxy unit, m is an integer greater than 0 and M is hydrogen or a cation. Preferably, R is an unsubstituted C 12
-C
18 alkyl group, A is an ethoxy unit, m is from about 0.5 to about 6, and M is a cation. The cation is preferably a metal cation sodium-preferred, potassium, lithium, calcium, magnesium, etc.) or an ammonium or substituted ammonium cation.
It is preferred that the ratio of the above surfactant to the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide herein be from about 1:2 to about 8:1, preferably about 1:1 to about 5:1, most preferably about 1:1 to about 4:1.
The liquid compositions herein may alternatively comprise polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, AES, and from about 0.5% to about of the condensation product of C 8
-C
22 (preferably Co-C 2 z) linear alcohol with between about 1 and about 25, preferably between about 2 and about 18, moles of ethylene oxide per mole of alcohol.
As described above, the liquid compositions herein preferably have a pH in a 10% solution in water at 20'C of from about 6.5 to about 11.0, preferably from about 7.0 to about The instant compositions preferably further comprise from about 0.1% to about 50% of detergency builder. These compositions preferably comprise from about 0.1% to about 20% of citric acid, or water-soluble salt thereof, and from about 0.1% to about 20% of a water-soluble succinate tartrate, especially the sodium salt thereof, and mixtures thereof, or from about 0.1% to about 20% by weight of oxydisuccinate or mixtures thereof with the aforesaid builders. 0.1%-50% alkenyl succinate can also be used.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 57 The preferred liquid compositions herein comprise from about 0.0001% to about preferably about 0.0001% to about most preferably about 0.001% to about on an active basis, of detersive enzyme. These enzymes are preferably selected from the group consisting of protease (preferred), lipase (preferred), amylase, cellulase, peroxidase, and mixtures thereof. Preferred are compositions with two or more classes of enzymes, most preferably where one is a protease.
While various descriptions of detergent proteases, cellulases, etc., are available in the literature, detergent lipases may be somewhat less familiar. Accordingly, to assist the formulator, lipases of interest include Amano AKG and Bacillis Sp lipase Solvay enzymes). Also, see the lipases described in EP A 0 399 681, published November 28, 1990, EP A 0 218 272, published April 15, 1987 and PCT/DK 88/00177, published May 18, 1989, all incorporated herein by reference.
Suitable fungal lipases include those producible by Humicola lanuginosa and Thermomyces lanuginosus. Most preferred is the lipase obtained by cloning the gene from Humicola lanuginosa and expressing the gene in Aspergillus oryzae, as described in European Patent Application 0 258 068, incorporated herein by reference, commercially available under the trade name LIPOLASE.
From about 2 to about 20,000, preferably about 10 to about 6,000, lipase units of lipase per gram (LU/g) of product can be used in these compositions. A lipase unit is that amount of lipase which produces 1 pmol of titratable butyric acid per minute in a pH stat, where pH is 7.0, temperature is 30°C, and substrate is an emulsion tributyrin and gum arabic, in the presence of Ca++ and NaCl in phosphate buffer.
The following Example illustrates a preferred heavy duty liquid detergent composition comprising: an enzyme selected from proteases, cellulases and lipases, or, preferably, a mixture thereof, typically comprising from about 0.01% to about 2% by weight of the total composition, although the amounts used can be adjusted according to the desires of the formulator to provide an "effective" amount soil-removing amount) of said enzyme or enzyme mixture; 1 LI C~I~ WO 92/06154 PC~/US91/07028 -58a polyhydroxy fatty acid amine surfactant of the type disclosed herein, typically comprising at least about 2% by weight of the composition, more typically from about 3% to about 15%, preferably from about 7% to about 14%; a surfactant of the RO(A)mSO 3 M type, as disclosed herein, preferably RO(CH2CH20)mS03M, wherein R is
C
14
-C
15 (avg.) and m is 2-3 wherein M is H or a water-soluble salt-forming cation, Na+, said surfactant typically comprising from about 5% to about 25% by weight of the composition; optionally, a surfactant of the ROSO 3 M type, as disclosed herein, preferably wherein R is Cz 1
-C
14 (avg.), said surfactant preferably comprising from about 1% to about 10% by weight of the compositions; a liquid carrier, especially water or water-alcohol mixtures; optionally, but most preferably, effective amounts of enzyme stabilizers, typically about 1% to about 10%, by weight of the composition; optionally, but preferably, water-soluble builders, especially polycarboxylate builders, typically at about 4% to about 25% by weight of the composition; optionally, the various detersive adjuncts, brighteners, etc., noted hereinabove, typically (if used) at about 1% to about 10% by weight of the composition; and the composition is substantially free from LAS.
EXAMPLE XII Ingredients Wt.% C14-15 alkyl polyethoxylate (2.25) sulfonic acid 21.0 C12-14 fatty acid N-methyl glucamidel Sodium tartrate mono- and di-succinate (80:20 mix) 4.00 Citric acid 3.80 C12-14 fatty acid 3.00 Tetraethylene pentaamine ethoxylate(15-18) 1.50 Ethoxylated copolymer of polyethylene 0.20 polypropylene terephthalate polysulfonic acid Protease B (34g/1) 2 0.68 Lipase (100KLU/g) 3 0.47 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 59 Cellulase (5000 cevu/g) 4 0.14 Brightener 36 5 0.15 Ethanol 5.20 Monoethanolamine 2.00 Sodium formate 0.32 1,2 propane diol 8.00 Sodium hydroxide 3.10 Silicone suds suppressor 0.0375 Boric acid 2.00 Water/misc. Balance to 100 IPrepared as disclosed above.
2 Protease B is a modified bacterial serine protease described in European Patent Application Serial No. 87 303761 filed April 28, 1987, particularly pages 17, 24 and 98.
3 Lipase used herein is the lipase obtained by cloning the gene from Humicola lanuginosa and expressing the gene in Aspergillus oryzae, as described in European Patent Application 0 258 068, commercially available under the trade name LIPOLASE (ex Novo Nordisk A/S, Copenhagen Denmark).
4 Cellulase used herein is sold under the trademark CAREZYME (Novo Nordisk, A/S, Copenhagen Denmark).
Brightener 36 is commercially available as TINOPAL TAS 36.
The brightener is added to the composition as a separately prepared pre-mix of brightener monoethanolamine and water The following is not intended to limit the invention herein, but is simply to further illustrate additional aspects of the technology which may be considered by the formulator in the manufacture of a wide variety of detergent compositions using the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides.
7 It will be readily appreciated that the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides are, by virtue of their amide bond, subject to some instability under highly basic or highly acidic conditions. While some decomposition can be tolerated, it is preferred that these materials not be subjected to pH's above about 11, preferably nor below about 3 for unduly extended periods. Final product pH (liquids) is typically 7.0-9.0.
h WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 60 During the manufacture of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides it will typically be necessary to at least partially neutralize the base catalyst used to form the amide bond. While any acid can be used for this purpose, the detergent formulator will recognize that it is a simple and convenient matter to use an acid which provides an anion that is otherwise useful and desirable in the finished detergent composition. For example, citric acid can be used for purposes of neutralization and the resulting citrate ion (ca. be allowed to remain with a ca. 40% polyhydroxy fatty acid amide slurry and be pumped into the later manufacturing stages of the overall detergent-manufacturing process. The acid forms of materials such as oxydisuccinate, nitrilotriacetate, ethylenediaminetetraacetate, tartrate/succinate, and the like, can be used similarly.
The polyhydroxy fatty acid amides derived from coconut alkyl fatty acids (predominantly C 12
-C
14 are more soluble than their tallow alkyl (predominantly C 16
-C
18 counterparts. Accordingly, the C 12
-C
14 materials are somewhat easier to formulate in liquid compositions, and are more soluble in cool-water laundering baths.
However, the Ci 6 materials are also quite useful, especially under circumstances where warm-to-hot wash water is used. Indeed, the Ce 1
-C
18 materials may be better detersive surfactants than their C 1 2
-C
14 counterparts. Accordingly, the formulator may wish to balance ease-of-manufacture vs. performance when selecting a particular polyhydroxy fatty acid amide for use in a given formulation.
It will also be appreciated that the solubility of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides can be increased by having points of unsaturation and/or chain branching in the fatty acid moiety.
Thus, materials such as the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides derived from oleic acid and iso-stearic acid are more soluble than their n-alkyl counterparts.
Likewise, the solubility of polyhydroxy fatty acid amides prepared from disaccharides, trisaccharides, etc., will ordinarily be greater than the solubility of their monosaccharide-derived counterpart materials. This higher solubility can be of particular assistance when formulating liquid compositions. Moreover, the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides wherein the polyhydroxy group is
I
i ;1 ~IB~R~CI~rrSl WO 92/06154 P(7/US91/07028 -61derived from maltose appear to function especially well as detergents when used in combination with conventional alkylbenzene su'ifonate surfactants. While not intending to be limited by theory, it appears that the combination of LAS with the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides derived from the higher saccharides such as maltose causes a substantial and unexpected lowering of interfacial tension in aqueous media, thereby enhancing net detergency performance. (The manufacture of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide derived from maltose is described hereinafter.) The polyhydroxy fatty acid amides can be manufactured not only from the purified sugars, but also from hydrolyzed starches, corn starch, potato starch, or any other convenient plantderived starch which contains the mono-, di-, etc. saccharide desired by the formulator. This is of particular importance from the economic standpoint. Thus, "high glucose" corn syrup, "high maltose" corn syrup, etc. can conveniently and economically be used. De-lignified, hydrolyzed cellulose pulp can also provide a raw material source for the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides.
As noted above, polyhydroxy fatty acid amides derived from the higher saccharides, such as maltose, lactose, etc., are more soluble than their glucose counterparts. Moreover, it appears that the more soluble polyhydroxy fatty acid amides can help solubilize their less soluble counterparts, to varying degrees.
Accordingly, the formulator may elect to use a raw material comprising a high glucose corn syrup, for example, but to select a syrup which contains a modicum of maltose 1% or more). The resulting mixture of polyhydroxy fatty acids will, in general, exhibit more preferred solubility properties over a broader range of temperatures and concentrations than would a "pure" glucosederived polyhydroxy fatty acid amide. Thus, in addition to any economic advantages for using sugar mixtures rather than pure sugar reactants, the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides prepared from mixed sugars can offer very substantial advantages with respect to performance and/or ease-of-formulation. In some instances, however, some loss of grease removal performance (dishwashing) may be noted at fatty acid maltamide levels above about 25% and some loss in sudsing above -about 33% (said percentages being the percentage of maltamide-derived polyhydroxy fatty acid amide vs.
;i 1 i WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -62glucose-derived polyhydroxy fatty acid amide in the mixture).
This can vary somewhat, depending on the chain length of the fatty acid moiety. Typically, then, the formulator electing to use such mixtures may find it advantageous to select polyhydroxy fatty acid amide mixtures which contain ratios of monosaccharides glucose) to di- and higher saccharides maltose) from about 4:1 to about 99:1.
The manufacture of preferred, uncyclized polyhydroxy fatty acid amides from fatty esters and N-alkyl polyols can be carried out in alcohol solvents at temperatures from about 30'C-90°C, preferably about 50'C-80C. It has now been determined that it may be convenient for the formulator of, for example, liquid detergents to conduct such processes in 1,2-propylene glycol solvent, since the glycol solvent need not be completely removed from the reaction product prior to use in the finished detergent formulation. Likewise, the formulator of, for example, solid, typically granular, detergent compositions may find it convenient to run the process at 30°C-90*C in solvents which comprise ethoxylated alcohols, such as the ethoxylated (EO 3-8) C12-C 14 alcohols, such as those available as NEODOL 23 E06.5 (Shell).
When such ethoxylates are used, it is preferred that they not contain substantial amounts of unethoxylated alcohol and, most preferably, not contain substantial amounts of mono-ethoxylated alcohol. designation.) While methods for making polyhydroxy fatty acid amides per se form no part of the invention herein, the formulator can also note other syntheses of polyhydroxy fatty acid amides as described hereinafter.
Typically, the industrial scale reaction sequence for preparing the preferred acyclic polyhydroxy fatty acid amides will comprise: Step 1 preparing the N-alkyl polyhydroxy amine y derivative from the desired sugar or sugar mixture by formation of an adduct of the N-alkyl amine and the sugar, followed by reaction with hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst; followed by Step 2 reacting the aforesaid polyhydroxy amine with, preferably, a fatty ester to form an amide bond. While a variety of N-alkyl polyhydroxy amines useful in Step 2 of the reaction sequence can be prepared by various art-disclosed processes, the following process t* ~III_- LI-LII- .I WO 92/06154 PC/US91/07028 -63 is convenient and makes use of economical sugar syrup as the raw material. It is to be understood that, for best results when using such syrup raw materials, the manufacturer should select syrups that are quite light in color or, preferably, nearly colorless ("water-white").
Preparation of N-Alkyl Polyhydroxy Amine From Plant-Derived Sugar Syrup I. Adduct Formation The following is a standard process in which about 420 g of about 55% glucose solution (corn syrup about 231 g glucose about 1.28 moles) having a Gardner Color of less than 1 is reacted with about 119 g of about 50% aqueous methylamine (59.5 g of methylamine 1.92 moles) solution. The methylamine (MMA) solution is purged and shielded with N 2 and cooled to about 10°C, or less. The corn syrup is purged and shielded with N 2 at a temperature of about 10"-20'C. The corn syrup is added slowly to the MMA solution at the indicated reaction temperature as shown. The Gardner Color is measured at the indicated approximate times in minutes.
TABLE 1 Time in Minutes: 10 30 60 120 180 240 Reaction Temp. "C Gardner Color (Approximate) 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 4 50 4 6 10 As can be seen from the above data, the Gardner Color for the adduct is much worse as the temperature is raised above about 30 0
°C
and at about 50°C, the time that the adduct has a Gardner Color below 7 is only about 30 minutes. For longer reaction, and/or holding times, the temperature should be less than about The Gardner Color should be less than about 7, and preferably less than about 4 for good color glucamine.
TNI When one uses lower temperatures for forming the adduct, the time to reach substantial equilibrium concentration of the adduct is shortened by the use of higher ratios of amine to sugar. With the 1.5:1 mole ratio of amine to sugar noted, equilibrium is reached in about two hours at a reaction temperature of about At a 1.2:1 mole ratio, under the same conditions, the time is at least about three hours. For good color, the combination of I WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 64amine:sugar ratio; reaction temperature; and reaction time is selected to achieve substantially equilibrium conversion, e.g., more than about 90%, preferably more than about 95%, even more preferably more than about 99%, based upon the sugar, and a color that is less than about 7, preferably less than about 4, more preferably less than about 1, for the adduct.
Using the above process at a reaction temperature of less than about 20"C and corn syrups with different Gardner Colors as indicated, the MMA adduct color (after substantial equilibrium is reached in at least about two hours) is as indicated.
TABLE 2 Gardner Color (Approximate) Corn syrup 1 1 I 1+ 0 0 0+ Adduct 3 4/5 7/8 7/8 1 2 1 As can be seen from the above, the starting sugar material must be very near colorless in order to consistently have adduct that is acceptable. When the sugar has a Gardner Color of about 1, the adduct is sometimes acceptable and sometimes not acceptable. When the Gardner Color is above 1 the resulting adduct is unacceptable. The better the initial color of the sugar, the better is the color of the adduct.
II. Hvdrogen Reaction Adduct from the above having a Gardner Color of 1 or less is hydrogenated according to the following procedure.
About 539 g of adduct in water and about 23.1 g of United Catalyst G49B Ni catalyst are added to a one liter autoclave and purged two times with 200 psig H 2 at about 20"C. The H 2 pressure is raised to about 1400 psi and the temperature is raised to about The pressure is then raised to about 1600 psig and the temperature is held at about 50-55"C for about three hours. The product is about 95% hydrogenated at this point. The temperature ~"is then raised to about 85C for about 30 minutes and the reaction mixture is decanted and the catalyst is filtered out. The product, after removal of water and MMA by evaporation, is about N-methyl glucamine, a white powder.
The above procedure is repeated with about 23.1 g of Raney Ni catalyst with the following changes. The catalyst is washed three times and the reactor, with the catalyst in the reactor, is purged L
I
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 65 twice with 200 psig H 2 and the reactor is pressurized with H 2 at 1600 psig for two hours, the pressure is released at one hour and the reactor is repressurized to 1600 psig. The adduct is then pumped into the reactor which is at 200 psig and 20'C, and the reactor is purged with 200 psig H 2 etc., as above.
The resulting product in each case is greater than about N-methyl glucamine; has less than about 10 ppm Ni based upon the glucamine; and has a solution color of less than about Gardner 2.
The crude N-methyl glucamine is color stable to about 140°C for a short exposure time.
It is important to have good adduct that has low sugar content (less than about preferably less than about and a good color (less than about 7, preferably less than about 4 Gardner, more preferably less than about 1).
In another reaction, adduct is prepared starting with about 159 g of about 50% methylamine in water, which is purged and shielded with N 2 at about 10-20°C. About 330 g of about 70% corn syrup (near water-white) is degassed with N 2 at about 50*C and is added slowly to the methylamine solution at a temperature of less than about 20°C. The solution is mixed for about 30 minutes to give about 95% adduct that is a very light yellow solution.
About 190 g of adduct in water and about 9 g of United Catalyst G49B Ni catalyst are added to a 200 ml autoclave and purged three times with H 2 at about 20°C. The H 2 pressure is f raised to about 200 psi and the temperature is raised to about The pressure is raised to 250 psi and the temperature is held at about 50-55*C for about three hours. The product, which is about 95% hydrogenated at this point, is then raised to a temperature of about 85°C for about 30 minutes and the product, after removal of water and evaporation, is about 95% N-methyl glucamine, a white powder.
v It is also important to minimize contact between adduct and catalyst when the H 2 pressure is less than about 1000 psig to minimize Ni content in the glucamine. The nickel content in the N-methyl glucamine in this reaction is about 100 ppm as compared to the less than 10 ppm in the previous reaction.
The following reactions with H2 are run for direct comparison of reaction temperature effects.
i. WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -66 A 200 ml autoclave reactor is used following typical procedures similar to those set forth above to make adduct and to run the hydrogen reaction at various temperatures.
Adduct for use in making glucamine is prepared by combining about 420 g of about 55% glucose (corn syrup) solution (231 g glucose; 1.28 moles) (the solution is made using 99DE corn syrup from CarGill, the solution having a color less than Gardner 1) and about 119 g of 50% methylamine (59.5 g MMA; 1.92 moles) (from Air Products).
The reaction procedure is as follows: 1. Add about 119 g of the 50% methylamine solution to a N 2 purged reactor, shield with N 2 and cool down to less than about 2. Degas and/or purge the 55% corn syrup solution at 10-20'C with N 2 to remove oxygen in the solution.
3. Slowly add the corn syrup solution to the methylamine solution and keep the temperature less than about 4. Once all corn syrup solution is added in, agitate for about 1-2 hours.
The adduct is used for the hydrogen reaction right after making, or is stored at low temperature to prevent further degradation.
The glucamine adduct hydrogen reactions are as follows: 1. Add about 134 g adduct (color less than about Gardner 1) and about 5.8 g G49B Ni to a 200 ml autoclave.
j 2. Purge the reaction mix with about 200 psi H 2 twice at about 20-300C.
3. Pressure with H 2 to about 400 psi and raise the temperature to about 0 4. Raise pressure to about 500 psi, react for about 3 hours.
Keep temperature at about 50-55'C. Take Sample 1.
Raise temperature to about 85'C for about 30 minutes.
6. Decant and filter out the Ni catalyst. Take Sample 2.
Conditions for constant temperature reactions: 3 1. Add about 134 g adduct and about 5.8 g G49B Ni to a 200 ml autoclave.
2. Purge with about 200 psi H 2 twice at low temperature.
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 67 3. Pressure with H 2 to about 400 psi and raise temperature to about 500C.
4. Raise pressure to about 500 psi, react for about 3.5 hours.
Keep temperature at indicated temperature.
5. Decant and filter out the Ni catalyst. Sample 3 is for about 50-55°C; Sample 4 is for about 75*C; and Sample 5 is for about 85°C. (The reaction time for about 85°C is about minutes.) All runs give similar purity of N-methyl glucamine (about the Gardner Colors of the runs are similar right after reaction, but only the two-stage heat treatment gives good color stability; and the 85 0 C run gives marginal color immediately after reaction.
EXAMPLE XIII The preparation of the tallow (hardened) fatty acid amide of N-methyl maltamine for use in detergent compositions according to this invention is as follows.
Step 1 Reactants: Maltose monohydrate (Aldrich, lot 01318KW); methylamine (40 wt% in water) (Aldrich, lot 03325TM); Raney nickel, 50% slurry (UAD 52-73D, Aldrich, lot 12921LW).
The reactants are added to glass liner (250 g maltose, 428 g methylamine solution, 100 g catalyst slurry 50 g Raney Ni) and placed in 3 L rocking autoclave, which is purged with nitrogen (3X500 psig) and hydrogen (2X500 psig) and rocked under H 2 at room temperature over a weekend at temperatures ranging from 28°C to The crude reaction mixture is vacuum filtered 2X through a glass microfiber filter with a silica gel plug. The filtrate is concentrated to a viscous material. The final traces of water are azetroped off by dissolving the material in methanol and then removing the methanol/water on a rotary evaporator. Final drying is done under high vacuum. The crude product is dissolved in refluxing methanol, filtered, cooled to recrystallize, filtered and the filter cake is dried under vacuum at 35"C. This is cut The filtrate is concentrated until a precipitate begins to form and is stored in a refrigerator overnight. The solid is filtered and dried under vacuum. This is cut The filtrate is again concentrated to half its volume and a recrystallization is performed. Very little precipitate forms. A small quantity of
A
I; .L WO 92/06154 PCr/US91/07028 -68 ethanol is added and the solution is left in the freezer over a weekend. The solid material is filtered and dried under vacuum.
The combined solids comprise N-methyl maltamine which is used in Step 2 of the overall synthesis.
Step 2 Reactants: N-methyl maltamine (from Step 1); hardened tallow methyl esters; sodium methoxide (25% in methanol); absolute methanol (solvent); mole ratio 1:1 amine:ester; initial catalyst level 10 mole (w/r maltamine), raised to 20 mole solvent level 50% In a sealed bottle, 20.36 g of the tallow methyl ester is heated to its melting point (water bath) and loaded into a 250 ml 3-neck round-bottom flask with mechanical stirring. The flask is heated to ca. 70°C to prevent the ester from solidifying.
Separately, 25.0 g of N-methyl maltamine is combined with 45.36 g of methanol, and the resulting slurry is added to the tallow ester with good mixing. 1.51 g of 25% sodium methoxide in methanol is added. After four hours the reaction mixture has not clarified, so an additional 10 mole of catalyst (to a total of 20 mole is added and the reaction is allowed to continue overnight (Ca.
68°C) after which time the mixture is clear. The reaction flask is then modified for distillation. The temperature is increased to 110°C. Distillation at atmospheric pressure is continued for minutes. High vacuum distillation is then begun and continued for 14 minutes, at which time the product is very thick. The product is allowed to remain in the reaction flask at 110°C (external temperature) for 60 minutes. The product is scraped from the flask and triturated in ethyl ether over a weekend.
Ether is removed on a rotary evaporator and the product is stored in an oven overnight, and ground to a powder. Any remaining N-methyl maltamine is removed from the product using silica gel.
A silica gel slurry in 100% methanol is loaded into a funnel and washed several times with 100% methanol. A concentrated sample of the product (20 g in 100 ml of 100% methanol) is loaded onto the silica gel and eluted several times using vacuum and several methanol washes. The collected eluant is evaporated to dryness (rotary evaporator). Any remaining tallow ester is removed by trituration in ethyl acetate overnight, followed by filtration.
pp WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -69- The filter cake is vacuum dried overnight. The product is the tallowalkyl N-methyl maltamide.
In an alternate mode, Step 1 of the foregoing reaction sequence can be conducted using commercial corn syrup comprising glucose or mixtures of glucose and, typically, or higher, maltose. The resulting polyhydroxy fatty acid amides and mixtures can be used in any of the detergent compositions herein.
In still another mode, Step 2 of the foregoing reaction sequence can be carried out in 1,2-propylene glycol or NEODOL. At the discretion of the formulator, the propylene glycol or NEODOL need not be removed from the reactionproduct prior to its use to formulate detergent compositions. Again, according to the desires of the formulator, the methoxide catalyst can be neutralized by citric acid to provide sodium citrate, which can remain in the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide.
Depending on the desires of the formulator, the compositions herein can contain more or less of various suds control agents.
Typically, for dishwashing high sudsing is desirable so no suds control agent will be used. For fabric laundering in top-loading washing machines some control of suds may be desirable, and for front-loaders some considerable degree of suds control may be preferred. A wide variety of suds control agents are known in the art and can be routinely selected for use herein. Indeed, the selection of suds control agent, or mixtures of suds control agents, for any specific detergent composition will depend not only on the presence and amount of polyhydroxy fatty acid amide used therein, but also on the other surfactants presnt in the formulation. However, it appears that, for use with polyhydroxy fatty acid amides, silicone-based suds control agents of various types are more efficient lower levels can be used) than various other types of suds control agents. The silicone suds control agents available as X2-3419 and Q2-3302 (Dow Corning) are particularly useful herein.
The formulator of fabric laundering compositions which can advantageously contain soil release agent has a wide variety of known materials to choose from (see, for example, U.S. Patents 3,962,152; 4,116,885; 4,238,531; 4,702,857; 4,721,580 and 4,877,896). Additional soil release materials useful herein WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 include the nonionic oligomeric esterification product of a reaction mixture comprising a source of C 1
-C
4 alkoxy-terminated polyethoxy units CH 3
[OCH
2
CH
2 a source of terephthaloyl units dimethyl terephthalate); a source of poly(oxyethylene)oxy units polyethylene glycol 1500); a source of oxyiso-propyleneoxy units 1,2-propylene glycol); and a source of oxyethyleneoxy units ethylene glycol) especially wherein the mole ratio of oxyethyleneoxy units:oxyisopropyleneoxy units is at least about 0.5:1. Such nonionic soil release agents are of the general formula 0 0 0 0
I
C CO -CH-CH20 C 0(CH
C
HH
2 0)y
SR
2 m n 0 0 C D- C 0 (CH 2 CH20)x-R 1 wherein R 1 is lower C 1
-C
4 alkyl, especially methyl; x and y are each integers from about 6 to about 100; m is an integer of from about 0.75 to about 30; n is an integer from about 0.25 to about 20; and R 2 is a mixture of both H and CH 3 to provide a mole ratio of oxyethyleneoxy:oxyisopropyleneoxy of at least about 0.5:1.
Another preferred type of soil release agent useful herein is of the general anionic type described in U.S. Patent 4,877,896, but with the condition that such agents be substantially free of monomers of the HOROH type wherein R is propylene or higher alkyl.
Thus, the soil release agents of U.S. Patent 4,877,896 can comprise, for example, the reaction product of dimethyl terephthalate, ethylene glycol, 1,2-propylene glycol and 3-sodiosulfobenzoic acid, whereas these additional soil release agents can comprise, for example, the reaction product of dimethyl terephthalate, ethylene glycol, 5-sodiosulfoisophthalate and 3-sodiosulfobenzoic acid. Such agents are preferred for use in granular laundry detergents.
The formulator may also determine that it is advantageous to include a non-perborate bleach, especially in heavy-duty granular laundry detergents. A variety of peroxygen bleaches are available, commercially, and can be used herein, but, of these, percarbonate is convenient and economical. Thus, the compositions i WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -71 herein can contain a solid percarbonate bleach, normally in the form of the sodium salt, incorporated at a level of from 3% to by weight, more preferably from 5% to 18% by weight and most preferably from 8% to 15% by weight of the composition.
Sodium percarbonate is an addition compound having a formula corresponding to 2Na 2
CO
3 3H 2 0 2 and is available commercially as a crystalline solid. Most commercially available material includes a low level of a heavy metal sequestrant such as EDTA, 1-hydroxyethylidene 1,1-diphosphonic acid (HEDP) or an aminophosphonate, that is incorporated during the manufacturing process. For use herein, the percarbonate can be incorporated into detergent compositions without additional protection, but preferred embodiments of the invention utilize a stable form of the material (FMC). Although a variety of coatings can be used, the most economical is sodium silicate of SiO2:Na20 ratio from 1.6:1 to 2.8:1, preferably 2.0:1, applied as an aqueous solution and dried to give a level of from 2% to 10% (normally from 3% to of silicate solids by weight of the percarbonate. Magnesium silicate can also be used and a chelant such as one of those mentioned above can also be included in the coating.
The particle size range of the crystalline percarbonate is from 350 micrometers to 450 micrometers with a mean of approximately 400 micrometers. When coated, the crystals have a size in the range from 400 to 600 micrometers.
While heavy metals present in the sodium carbonate used to manufacture the percarbonate can be controlled by the inclusion of seqestrants in the reaction mixture, the percarbonate still requires protection from heavy metals present as impurities in other ingredients of the product. It has been found that the total level of iron, copper and manganese ions in the product should not exceed 25 ppm and preferably should be less than 20 ppm in order to avoid an unacceptably adverse effect on percarbonate stability.
EXAMPLE XIV The following illustrates a perborate bleach-plus-bleach activator detergent composition of the present invention which is prepared by admixing the listed ingredients in a mixing drum.
F
^II
WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 72 In the example, Zeolite A refers to hydrated crystalline Zeolite A containing about 20% water and having an average particle size of 1 to 10, preferably 2 to 5, microns; LAS refers to sodium C,2.3 linear alkylbenzene sulfonate; AS refers to sodium Cz4-C, 5 alkyl sulfate; nonionic refers to coconut alcohol condensed with about 6.5 moles of ethylene oxide per mole of alcohol and stripped of unethoxylated and monoethoxylated alcohol, also abbreviated as CnAE6.5T.; and DTPA refers to sodium diethylenetriamine pentaacetate.
Base Granules'
AS
LAS
Moisture Sodium silicate (1.6 ratio) Sodium sulfate Sodium polyacrylate (4500 MW) PEG 8000 Nonionic Sodium carbonate Brightener Sodium aluminosilicate
DTPA
Perfume NAPAA Granules 2
NAPAA
LAS
Sulfate and Misc.
NOBS Granules 3
NOBS
LAS
PEG 8000 Misc.
Zeolite Granules 4 Sodium aluminosilicate PEG 8000 Nonionic Parts by Weight of Final Composition 51.97 9.44 2.92 4.47 1.35 6.47 2.61 1.18 0.46 13.29 0.20 9.11 0.27 0.20 6.09 2.86 0.30 2.93 3.88 3.15 0.12 0.19 0.42 12.00 7.39 1.50 1.16 of Granules 100.00 18.16 5.62 8.60 2.60 12.45 5.02 2.27 0.89 25.57 0.38 17.53 0.52 0.38 100.00 46.96 4.93 48.11 100.00 81.19 3.09 4.90 10.82 100.00 61.58 12.47 9.70 -i WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -73 Moisture 1.66 13.83 Misc. 0.29 2.42 Admix Sodium SKS-6 layered silicate 15.84 Protease (0.78 mg/g activity) 0.52 Sodium perborate monohydrate 1.33 Citric acid 6.79 C12-C 14 N-methyl glucamide 1.58 Total of final composition 100.00 IThe base granules are produced by spray drying an aqueous crutcher mix of the listed ingredients.
2 A freshly-prepared sample of NAPAA wet cake, which typically consists of about 60% water, about 2% peroxyacid available oxygen (AvO) (corresponding to about 36% NAPAA), and the rest (about 4%) unreacted starting material, is obtained. This wet cake is the I crude reaction product of NAAA (monononyl amide of adipic acid), sulfuric acid, and hydrogen peroxide which is subsequently quenched by addition to water followed by filtration, washing with distilled water, phosphate buffer washing and final suction filtration to recover the wet cake. A portion of the wet cake is air-dried at room temperature to obtain a dry sample which typically consists of about 5% AvO (corresponding to about NAPAA) and about 10% unreacted starting material. When dry, the sample pH is about NAPAA granules are prepared by mixing about 51.7 parts of the dried NAPAA wet cake (containing about 10% unreacted), about 11.1 parts of sodium C 12 .3 linear alkyl benzene sulfonate (LAS) paste (45% active), about 43.3 parts of sodium sulfate, and about parts of water in a CUISINART mixer. After drying, the granules (which contain about 47% NAPAA) are sized by passing through a No.
14 Tyler mesh sieve and retaining all particles not passing through a No. 65 Tyler mesh. The average amide peroxyacid particle (agglomerate) size is about 5-40 microns and the median particle size is about 10-20 microns, as determined by Malvern particle size analysis.
WO 92/0615 4 PCT/US91/07028 V -74- 74 3 The NOBS (nonanoyloxybenzene sulfonate) granules are prepared according to U.S. Patent 4,997,596, Bowling et al, issued March 5, 1991, incorporated herein by reference.
4 Zeolite granules having the following composition are made by mixing Zeolite A with PEG 8000 and CnAE6.5T in an Eirich R08 energy intensive mixer.
Parts by Weight Before Dryinq After Drying Zeolite A (includes bound water) 70.00 76.99 PEG 8000 10.80 12.49 8.40 9.72 Free water 10.80 0.80 The PEG 8000 is in an aqueous form containing 50% water and is at a temperature of approximately 55°F The is in a liquid state and is held at approximately 90'F (32.2'C).
The two liquids are combined by pumping through a 12 element static mixer. The resulting binder material has an outlet temperature of approximately 75'F (23.9*C) and a viscosity of approximately 5000 cps. The ratio of PEG 8000 and through the static mixer is 72:28 respectively.
The Eirich R08 energy intensive mixer is operated in a batch type mode. First, 34.1 kg of powdered Zeolite A is weighed into the pan of the mixer. The mixer is started by first rotating the pan in a counterclockwise direction at approximately 75 rotations per minute (rpm), and then rotating the rotor blade in a clockwise direction at 1800 rpm. The binder material is then pumped from the static mixer directly intr the Eirich R08 energy intensive mixer which contains Zeolite A. The feed rate of the binder material is about 2 minutes. The mixer continues to mix for an additional 1 minute for a total batch time of approximately 3 minutes. The batch is then discharged and collected in a fiber drum.
The batch step is repeated until approximately 225 kg of wet product has been collected. This discharged product is then dried in a fluid bed at 240-270°F (116-132*C). The drying step removes most of the free water and changes the composition as described above. The total energy input by the mixer to the product in a cI _I WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 batch mode is approximately 1.31X1012 erg/kg. at a rate of approximately 2.18X10 9 erg/kg-s.
The resulting free flowing agglomerates have a mean particle size of about 450-500 microns.
EXAMPLE XV A liquid laundry detergent composition suitable for use at the relatively high concentrations common to front-loading automatic washing machines, especially in Europe, and over a wide range of temperatures is as follows.
Ingredient Wt. Coconutalkyl (C 12 N methyl glucamide 14
C
1 4- 15 E0(2.25) sulfate, Na salt 10.0
C
1 4- 1 5 EO(7)
C
12 1 4 alkenylsuccinic anhydride 1
C
12 -1 4 fatty acid* Citric acid (anhydrous) 4.6 Protease (enzyme) 2 0.37 Termamyl (enzyme) 3 0.12 Lipolase (enzyme) 4 0.36 Carezyme (enzyme) 5 0.12 Dequest 2060S 6 NaOH (pH to 7.6) 1,2 propanediol 4.7 Ethanol Sodium metaborate CaC1 2 0.014 Ethoxylated tetraethylene pentamine 7 0.4 Brightener 8 0.13 Silane 9 0.04 Soil release polymer 10 0.2 Silicone (suds control) 11 0.4 Silicone dispersant 12 0.2 Water and minors Balance 'As SYNPRAX 3 from ICI or DTSA from Monsanto.
2 As Protease B as described in EPO 0342177 November 15, 1989, percentage at 40 g/l.
3 Amylase, from NOVO; percentage at 300 KNU/g.
4 Lipase, from NOVO; percentage at 100 KLU/g.
1 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -76- Cellulase from NOVO; percentage at 5000 CEVU/1.
6 Available from Monsanto.
7 From BASF as LUTENSOL P6105.
8 BLANKOPHOR CPG766, Bayer.
9 Silane corrosion inhibitor, available as A1130 from Union Carbide or DYNASYLAN TRIAMINO from Hlls.
1 oPolyester, per U.S. Patent 4,711,730.
1 Silicone suds control agent available as Q2-3302 from Dow Corning.
12 Dispersant for silicone suds control agent available as DC-3225C from Dow Corning.
*Preferred fatty acid is topped palm kernel, comprising 12% oleic and 2% each of stearic and linoleic.
EXAMPLE XVI A granular laundry detergent composition suitable for use at the relatively high concentrations common to front-loading automatic washing machines, especially in Europe, and over a wide range of temperatures is as follows.
Ingredient Wt. SOKALAN CP5 (100% active as Na salt) 1 3.52 DEQUEST 2066 (100% as acid) 2 0.45 TINOPAL DMS 3 0.28 MgSO 4 0.49 Zeolite A (anhydrous) 17.92 CMC (100% active) 4 0.47 Na 2
CO
3 9.44 Citric acid Layered Silicate SKS-6 12.9 Tallow alkyl sulfate (100% active; Na salt) 2.82
C
1 4 -Cs alkyl sulfate (100% active; Na salt)
C
12
-C
15 alkyl EO(3) sulfate 1.76
C
16 -Ci. N-methyl glucamide 4.1 DOBANOL C 12
-C
1 i EO(3) 3.54 LIPOLASE (100,000 LU/g) 5 0.42 SAVINASE (4.0 KNPU) 6 1.65 Perfume 0.53 X2-3419 7 0.22 Starch 1.08 p.
I WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 77 Stearyl alcohol 0.35 Sodium percarbonate (coated) 22.3 Tetraacetylethylenediamine (TAED) 5.9 Zinc phthalocyanin 0.02 Water (ex zeolite) Balance 'SOKALAN is sodium poly-acrylate/maleate available from Hoechst.
2 Monsanto brand of pentaphosphonomethyl diethylenetriamine.
brightener available from Ciba Geigy.
'Trade name FINNFIX available from Metasaliton.
LIPOLASE lipolytic enzyme from NOVO.
6 SAVINASE protease enzyme from NOVO.
7 X2-3419 is a silicone suds suppressor available from Dow Corning.
The procedure for preparing the granules comprises various tower-drying, agglomerating, dry-additions, etc., as follows. The percentages are based on the finished composition.
A. Crutched and Blown Through the Tower Using standard techniques crutched and tower-dried.
SOKALAN CP5 DEQUEST 2066 TINOPAL DMS Magnesium sulfate ZEOLITE A as anhydrous
CMC
B. Surfactant Aqglomerates the following components are 3.52% 0.45% 0.28% 0.49% 7.1% 0.47% r Bl. Agglomeration of Sodium Salt of Tallow Alkvl Sulfate and Sodium Salt of EO(3) Sulfate Pastes A 50% active paste of 30 tallow alkyl sulfate and a 70% paste of C 12 -Cs EO(3) sulfate are agglomerated with Zeolite A and sodium carbonate according to the following formula (contribution to the detergent formulation after the drying of the agglomerate).
Tallow alkyl sulfate 2.82%
C
12 15 EO(3) sulfate 1.18% Zeolite A 5.3% Sodium carbonate I c i i I- 1 i IME r -7 WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 78 B2. Aqqlomerate of the Alkvl Sulfate, Alkyl Ethoxy Sulfate, DOBANOL EO(3) and N-methyl glucose amide The C 16
-C
18 glucose amide nonionic material is synthesized with DOBANOL C 12 -1 5 E0(3) present during the reaction of methyl ester and N-methyl glucamine. The C 12 15 EO(3) acts as a melting point depressor which allows the reaction to be run without forming cyclic glucose amides which are undesirable.
A surfactant mixture of 20% DOBANOL C 12 -15 EO(3) and Ci 6 -Ci 8 N-methyl glucose amide is obtained and coagglomerated with 10% sodium carbonate.
Second, the above particle is then coagglomerated with a high active paste of a sodium salt of C 14 -Cs alkyl sulfate and
C
12 15 EO(3) sulfate and Zeolite A and extra sodium carbonate.
This particle evidences a good dispersibility in cold water of the
C
16 N-methyl glucose amide.
The overall formulation of this particle (contribution to the detergent formulation after the drying of the agglomerate) is:
C
16 -Cis N-methyl glucose amide 4.1% DOBANOL C 12 15 EO(3) 0.94% Sodium carbonate 4.94% Zeolite A 5.3% Na Cz 1 -Cs alkyl sulfate Na C 12 15 EO(3) sulfate 0.59% C. Dry Additives 25 The following ingredients are added.
Percarbonate 22.3% TAED (tetraacetylethylenediamine) 5.9% Layered silicate SKS 6 from Hoechst 12.90% Citric acid
I
i
I
Lipolase SAVINASE 4.0 KNPU Zinc phthalocyanin (photobleach) D. Spray on DOBANOL C 1 2-15 EO(3) Perfume 0.42% 100,000 LU/g 1.65% 0.02% 2.60% 0.53% m I u"i p WO 92/06154 PCT/US91/07028 -79 E. Suds Suppressor The silicone suds suppressor X2-3419 (95-97% high molecular weight linear silicone; hydrophobic silica) ex Dow Corning is coagglomerated with Zeolite A (2-5 1p size), starch and stearyl alcohol binder. This particle has the following formulation: Zeolite A 0.22% Starch 1.08% X2-3419 0.22% Stearyl alcohol 0.35% The detergent preparation exhibits excellent solubility, superior performance and excellent suds control when used in a European washing machine, using 85 g detergent in a AEGbrand washing machine in 30°C, 40°C, 60'C and 90°C cycles.
EXAMPLE XVII In any of the foregoing examples, the fatty acid glucamide surfactant can be replaced by an equivalent amount of the maltamide surfactant, or mixtures of glucamide/maltamide surfactants derived from plant sugar sources. In the compositions the use of ethanolamides appears to help cold temperature stability of the finished formulations. Moreover, the use of sulfobetaine and/or amine oxide surfactants provides superior sudsing.
For compositions where high sudsing is desired it is preferred that less than about preferably less than about 2%, most preferably substantially no C 14 or higher fatty acids be present, since these can suppress sudsing. Accordingly, the formulator of high sudsing compositions will desirably avoid the introduction of suds-suppressing amounts of such fatty acids into high sudsing compositions with the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide and/or avoid the formation of C 14 and higher fatty acids on storage of the finished compositions. One simple means is to use
C
12 ester reactants to prepare the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides herein. Fortunately, the use of amine oxide or sulfobetaine surfactants can overcome some of the negative sudsing effects caused by the fatty acids.
The formulator wishing to add anionic optical brighteners to liquid detergents containing relatively high concentrations and greater) of anionic or polyanionic substituents such as the polycarboxylate builders may find it useful to pre-mix the r -7 I- WO 92/06154 PCI/US91/07028 80 brightener with water and the polyhydroxy fatty acid amide, and then to add the pre-mix to the final composition.
Polyglutamic acid or polyaspartic acid dispersants can be usefully employed with zeolite-built detergents. AE fluid or flake and DC-544 (Dow Corning) are other examples of useful suds control agents herein.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the chemical arts that the preparation of the polyhydroxy fatty acid amides herein using the di- and higher saccharides such as maltose will result in the formation of polyhydroxy fatty acid amides wherein linear substituent Z is "capped" by a polyhydroxy ring structure. Such materials are fully contemplated for use herein and do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as disclosed and claimed.
I
-I
L m

Claims (30)

1. A liquid detergent composition having improved enzyme stability or improved enzyme cleaning performance comprising one or more anionic surfactants, nonionic surfactants, or mixtures thereof, builders and auxiliary detersive ingredients and detersive enzymes, e trized in that said composition contains an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula 0 R 1 R 2 C N Z wherein R 1 is HI, CI-C4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C 5 -C 31 hydroxycarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxyl- ated derivative thereof.
2. A composition according to Claim 1, wherein said enzymes comprise alkaline proteases, amylases, lipases, cellulases, or peroxidases, or mixtures thereof.
3. A composition according to Claim 2, wherein said enzyme comprises a lipase enzyme and which contains at least 3% by weight of said polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material.
4. A detergent composition according to Claim 3, wherein R 1 is methyl, R 2 is C11-C17 alkyl or alkenyl, and Z is derived from glucose, maltose, fructose, or mixtures thereof.
A laundry detergent composition according to Claim 1 wherein the anionic surfactant is not an alkylbenzene sulfonate surfactant. 1
6. A detergent composition according to Claim 3 comprising: from 1% to 50% of anionic surfactant; from 0.0001% to 2% of active detersive enzyme; ST an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula SUBSTITUTE SHEET 82 0 R 1 R 2 C N Z wherein R1 is H1, CI-C 4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C 5 -C 3 1 hydrocarbyl, and Z is.a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof; and wherein said composition is substantially free of alkylbenzene sulfonate.
7. A composition according to Claim 6 wherein said anionic surfactant comprises: RO (A)m S0 3 M wherein R is an unsubstituted C 10 -C 24 alkyl or hydroxyalkyl 2 4) group, A is an ethoxy or propoxy unit, m is greater than 0 and M is hydrogen or a cation.
8. A composition according to Claim 7 wherein said detersive enzyme is a lipase enzyme, preferably derived from Humicola lanuginosa.
9. A composition according to Claim .8 comprising from 4% to of said anionic surfactant.
A composition according to Claim 6 comprising a water-soluble alkyl sulfate as the anionic surfactant.
11. A composition according to Claim 6 wherein said composition further comprises from 0.1% to 50% of detergendy builder, preferably citrate.
12. A method for enhancing detersive enzyme stability or performance of a liquid detergent composition containing conventional surfactants and builders and a detersive enzyme in the presence of an aqueous media, in hat.. it -e-compise- adding to said composition an enzyme-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide compound of the formula j U BSTITUTE SHEET 83 0 R 1 R 2 C -N Z wherein R 1 is H1, Ci-C 4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C5-C 3 1 hydrocarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, preferably C 11 -C 1 7 N-methyl glucamide, C1-C17 N-methyl maltamide, C11-C17 N-methyl fructamide, or mixtures thereof.
13. A method according to Claim 12 wherein said detergent composition is substantially free from alkyl benzene sulfonate surfactant.
14. A method according to Claim 13 wherein the builder is a citrate builder.
A method according to Claim 14 wherein at least one enzyme in the composition is a member of the lipase class of enzymes.
16. A granular detergent composition having improved enzyme cleaning performance comprising one or more anionic surfactants, nonionic surfactants, or mixtures thereof, builders and auxiliary detersive ingredients and detersive enzymes, characterized in that said composition contains an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula 0 R 1 R2 C N Z wherein R 1 is HI, C 1 -C4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C 5 -C 3 1 hydroxycarbyl, and Z is Sa polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxyl- ated derivative thereof.
17. A composition according to Claim 16, wherein said enzymes comprise alkaline proteases, amylases, lipases, cellulases, or peroxidases, or mixtures thereof. S 3' Z L r i i' 84
18. A composition according to- Claim 17, wherein said enzyme comprises a lipase enzyme and which contains at least 3% by weight of said polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material.
19. A detergent composition according to Claim 18, wherein R 1 is methyl, R 2 is C11-C17 alkyl or alkenyl, and Z is derived from glucose, maltose, fructose, or mixtures thereof.
A laundry detergent composition according to Claim 16 wherein the anionic surfactant is not an alkylbenzene sulfonate surfactant.
21. A granular detergent composition according to Claim comprising:. from 1% to 50% of anionic surfactant; from 0.0001% to 2% of active detersive enzyme; an enzyme performance-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide material of the formula 0 R1 R 2 C N Z wherein R 1 is HI, CI-C 4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R 2 is C 5 -C31 hydrocarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, or an alkoxylated derivative thereof; and wherein said composition is substantially free of alkylbenzene sulfonate.
22. A composition according to Claim 21 wherein said detersive enzyme is a lipase enzyme, preferably derived from Humicola 1anuginosa.
23. A composition according to Claim 21 comprising from 4% to of said anionic surfactant. f- 5
24. A composition according to Claim 23 comprising a water- soluble alkyl sulfate as the anionic surfactant.
A composition according to Claim 21 wherein said composition further comprises from 0.1% to 50% of detergency builder, preferably zeolite or layered silicate, or mixtures thereof.
26. A method for enhancing detersive enzyme performance of a granular detergent composition containing conventional surfactants and builders and a detersive enzyme in the presehce of an aqueous media, characterized in that it comprises adding to said composition an enzyme-enhancing amount of a polyhydroxy fatty acid amide compound of the formula 0 R1 R2 C N Z wherein Ri is H1, C 1 -C4 hydrocarbyl, 2-hydroxy ethyl, 2-hydroxy propyl, or a mixture thereof, R2 is C 5 -C31 hydrocarbyl, and Z is a polyhydroxyhydrocarbyl having a linear hydrocarbyl chain with at least 3 hydroxyls directly connected to said chain, preferably Cll-C 17 N-methyl glucamide, C11-C17 N-methyl maltamide, C11-C17 N-methyl fructamide, or mixtures thereof.
27. A method according to Claim 26 wherein said detergent compo- sition is substantially free from alkyl benzene sulfonate surfactant.
28. A method according -to Claim 27 wherein the builder is a zeolite or layered silicate builder, or mixtures thereof. VJr US TTUE S3-&ET r -86-
29. A detergent composition according to claim 1 or claim 16 substantially as herein described with reference to any one of the Examples. DATED: 10 August, 1995 PHILLIPS ORMONDE FITZPATRICK Attorneys for: THE PROCTER GAMBLE COMPANY ii i 1 i 0 ,1 l f c -L I i il- i 1 INTERNATIONAL SEARCH REPORT International Application No PCT/US 91/07028 I. CLASSIFICATION OF SUBJECT MATTER (if several classification symbols apply, indicate all) 6 According to International Patent Classification (IPC) or to both National Classification and I'C Int.Cl. 5 C11D1/52; C11D3/386 II. FIELDS SEARCHED Minimum Documentation Searched 7 Classification System Classification Symbols Int.C1. 5 C11D Documentation Searched other than Minimum Documentation to the Extent that such Documents are Included in the Fields Searched" III. DOCUMENTS CONSIDERED TO BE RELEVANT 9 Category o Citation of Document, I 1 with indication, where appropriate, of the relevant passages 12 Relevant to Claim No.l 3 A DE,A,1 767 413 (HENKEL) 9 September 1971 1,2,5-7 see page 1, line 1 page 5, line 6; claims A DE,A,2 036 477 (RiHM GMBH) 27 January 1972 1,2,4,11 see page 1, line 1 page 4, paragraph 3; claims 1,3-6 A DE,A,2 038 103 (HENKEL) 10 February 1972 1,2,4-6, 11 see page 1, line 1 page 5, line 2; claims 1,2 A GB,A,2 123 847 (PROCTER GAMBLE) 8 February 1,11,14 1984 see page 5, line 1 line 5; claim 1 A EP,A,0 220 676 (SUDDEUTSCHE ZUCKER-AG) 6 May 1,5-9 1987 see page 3, line 1 line 55; claims 1,3 o Special categories of cited documents later document published after the International filing date Sd d t g s o t a or priority date and not in conflict with the application but document defining the general state of the art which is not cited to understand the principle or theory underlying the considered to be of particular relevance invention earlier document but published on or after the international document of particular relevance; the claimed Invention filing date cannot be considered novel or cannot be considered to document which may throw doubts on priority claim(s) or involve an inventive step which is cited to establish the publication date of another document of particular relevance; the claimed invention citation or other special reason (as specified) cannot be considered to involve an inventive step when the document referring to an oral disclosure, use, exhibition or document is combined with one or more other such dncu- other means ments, such combination ing obvious to a person skilled document published prior to the international filing date hut in the art. later than the priority date claimed document member of the same patent family IV. CERIIFICATION Date of the Actual Completion of the International Search Date of Mailing of this International Search Report 14 JANUARY 1992
3 0 .IAN 1992 International Searching Authority Signature of Authori.d Officer EUROPEAN PATENT OFFICE SERBETSOGLOU A L l 7"' Form PCT/ISA/210 (serond shett) (January 1915) 0 PCT/US 91/07028 International Application No Ill. DOCUMENTS CONSIDERED TO flE RELEVANT (CONTINUED F-.M THlE SECOND) SHEET) ~Category 01Citation of Document, with Indication, where 2pprce. 'Ae, of the relevant passages IL Relevant to Claim No. EP,A,0 285 768 (HULS AG) 12 October 1988 cited in the application see page 2, line 1 page 4, line 53; claim 1 1,5-9, 11-13 i Form PCTr/ISA/210 (extra AMee) (.IanuMr NAM~ ANNEX TO THE INTERNATIONAL SEARCH REPORT ON INTERNATIONAL PATENT APPLICATION NO. US 9107028 SA 52101 I This annex lists the patcnt family members relating to the patent documents cited in the above-mentioned international search report. *rho members are as contained in the European Patent Office EDt' ile on Trhe European Patent office is in no way liable for these particulars which are merely given for the purpose of information. 14/0 1/92 itPatent document Publication PaetfmidPbiatio ced in search report date member(s.) dt DE-A-1767413 09-09-71 DE-A- 1619087 02-10-69 US-A- 3654166 04-04-72 DE-A-2036477 27-01-72 BE-A- 770415 01-12-71 CH-A- 562874 13-06-75 NL-A- 7109857 25-01-72 SE-A,8 362660 OE-A-2038103 10-02-72 None GB-A-2123847 08-02-84 CA-A- 1210299 26-08-86 EP-A-0220676 06-05-87 OE-A- 3538451 07-05-87 EP-A-0285768 12-10-88 DE-A- 3711776 27-10-88 ~JP-A- 63270534 08-11-88 US-A- 5009814 23-04-91 0 0 uj For more details about this annex see Official Journal or the European P'atent Office, No. 12/82
AU86699/91A 1990-09-28 1991-09-25 Polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactants to enhance enzyme performance Ceased AU663851B2 (en)

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US59061490A 1990-09-28 1990-09-28
US590614 1990-09-28
US71517091A 1991-06-14 1991-06-14
US715170 1991-06-14
US75590491A 1991-09-06 1991-09-06
US755904 1991-09-06
PCT/US1991/007028 WO1992006154A1 (en) 1990-09-28 1991-09-25 Polyhydroxy fatty acid amide surfactants to enhance enzyme performance

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