Answer#1Use regular unscented 5.25% household bleach. Read and follow the safety instructions on the bleach container's label. Never mix bleach with ammonia or any other cleaner. Wear rubber boots, rubber gloves, and eye protection. Try not to breathe bleach fumes. Open windows and doors to get fresh air.For purifying clear water, add ~0.75ml bleach per gallon. Let stand for 30 minutes before consuming.For purifying cloudy (ditch water) add ~1.5ml bleach per gallon. Let stand for 30 minutes before drinking.I recommend that after the water has been sanitized and has settled for several hours, pass it through a charcoal water filter, to remove the excess chlorine. The Brita water filter will remove the nasty tasting chlorine from the water. A chlorine detection kit (available at your local pool supply store) will detect the levels. Just be careful not to add it to water you plan to drink, OTO is poisonous.Info from CDC.gov
I truly hope that no one is bleaching their feet. The reasons are below. 1) You did not give the concentration (Molarity) of the bleach. 2) Bleach can eat away at skin, no matter the body part. 3) Bleach fumes can cause permanent harm to your health. So please, don't bleach anything but your whites. Thank you.
bleach
Bleach/ers
No way in hell. The ethanol will precipitate the bleach into salt and the gas oil will be immiscible in the solution due to the salt precipitation.
No, bleach does not contain ammonia. Bleach is typically composed of sodium hypochlorite or chlorine, while ammonia is a separate chemical compound. Mixing bleach and ammonia can produce toxic fumes that are harmful if inhaled.
No, ammonia is not bleach. Ammonia is a compound made up of nitrogen and hydrogen, while bleach typically refers to a group of chemicals called sodium hypochlorite or hydrogen peroxide that are used for cleaning and disinfecting. Mixing bleach with ammonia can produce toxic fumes and should be avoided.
No, bleach does not typically contain ammonia. Bleach usually contains sodium hypochlorite as the active ingredient and ammonia should not be mixed with bleach as it can create toxic fumes.
bleach
Ammonia has 3 hydrogens: NH3. It depends on the bleach you are talking about, Clorox has none.
Bleach.Do not mix bleach and ammonia. Combined, they react to make a toxic gas along with corrosive acids.Repeat: do not mix ammonia and bleach.
Noit does not based on ammonia. It is based on chlorine.
An independent variable is what you control. So in this case the independent variable would be how you're killing the bacteria (different solutions of bleach, different temperatures, different wavelengths of light, etc). The dependent variable is the variable you are looking for a change in, in this case it would be how many bacteria die.
Yes, mixing ammonia and bleach produces toxic fumes called chloramine gas, which can cause respiratory issues, coughing, chest pain, and even death if inhaled in high concentrations. It is important to never mix ammonia and bleach together.
No, ammonia is not an ingredient in Clorox bleach. Clorox products contain sodium hypochlorite as the active ingredient for disinfecting and whitening surfaces. Mixing bleach with ammonia can produce toxic fumes, so it is important to avoid combining the two products.
bleach ammonia
bleach and ammonia