Are you sure you don`t confuse plain citric acid with a combination of citric acid and washing soda which would form sodium citrate as soon as the product comes in contact with water? Have you checked the finished products pH levels in the MSDS?
As far as I know alkalinity is even more important for dishwashing detergents than laundry detergents because dishes can hold a lot of dried on stuff and alkalinity helps to swell and soften dried on food residue.
I think surfactants alone couldn`t accomplish this.
I`ve also never seen an acidic hard surface cleanser with or without nonionics that would come close to an alkaline one when it comes to removing oil and grease. So I have my doubts about acidic DW detergents.
There are also lots of anionic surfactants that show no or very little sensitivity to hard water minerals and can be mixed with acids. Just think of cleaning vinegar (Essigreiniger) or shower gel which is typically pH 5.5 to match the pH of healthy skin.
As far as I know alkalinity is even more important for dishwashing detergents than laundry detergents because dishes can hold a lot of dried on stuff and alkalinity helps to swell and soften dried on food residue.
I think surfactants alone couldn`t accomplish this.
I`ve also never seen an acidic hard surface cleanser with or without nonionics that would come close to an alkaline one when it comes to removing oil and grease. So I have my doubts about acidic DW detergents.
There are also lots of anionic surfactants that show no or very little sensitivity to hard water minerals and can be mixed with acids. Just think of cleaning vinegar (Essigreiniger) or shower gel which is typically pH 5.5 to match the pH of healthy skin.