Surfactants are the corn syrup of the chemical world—they’re in all kinds of products you’d never expect. Most people know that surfactants are an active ingredient in detergents, but you can also find them in a wide range of cleaning products, wetting agents, emulsifiers (including motor oil), foaming agents or dispersants.
That’s important to know, because surfactants are surprisingly destructive to certain types of chemical storage tanks. For example, we use the surfactant Igepal for our gel test. This test is used to determine the percentage of crosslinked polyethylene in our tanks. We place a sample of a tank wall in boiling Igepal, which dissolves any linear polyethylene and leaves only the cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) behind.
In other words, if you’re using a linear polyethylene tank to store materials that contain surfactants, the surfactants could possibly attack your tank wall over time and destroy the linear polyethylene.
Even tank fittings are vulnerable. We ran into this problem with our tanks that were storing firefighting foam, which is surfactant-based. We used linear chemical bolts for the flanges in our tanks, but the foam cracked the bolt heads and completely destroyed them. We’ve changed our practice for this application, but it illustrates an important point: any linear polymer in your tank is a susceptible to attack.
Surfactants are in more products than most people realize. It’s important to know if the materials you’re storing contain it, and to switch your tanks to a XLPE system instead of a cheaper grade of polyethylene or even fiberglass. For a robust, cost-effective storage system, cross-linked polyethylene is the material of choice. Talk to a chemical storage tank expert about our customized storage solutions for surfactants.