tin foil. the bleach reacts to the foil because of what its made of :}:>) <3
No, bleach changing the color of a shirt is a chemical change. The active ingredient in bleach, sodium hypochlorite, reacts with the dyes in the fabric, breaking them down and removing their color. This results in a permanent change in the chemical composition of the fabric.
No, bleach is a liquid
bleach can bleach out the color.
No, bleach is a solution.
No. Bleach is sodium hyochlorite, which is a base.
Ammonia. Produces chlorine vapor which is unstable and dangerous.
It does that because of the chemicals just like if u mix bleach and peroxide together it reacts immediately too.
If you mean chlorine bleach, then yeas. Particularly this happens in hypochlorite bleaches.
it turns red
No, bleach changing the color of a shirt is a chemical change. The active ingredient in bleach, sodium hypochlorite, reacts with the dyes in the fabric, breaking them down and removing their color. This results in a permanent change in the chemical composition of the fabric.
Yes. The active ingredient in most chlorine bleach is sodium hypochlorite (NaClO), a powerful oxidizing agent. Products of the oxidation that occurs when sodium hypochlorite reacts with other substances are generally corrosive.
By (internal) auto-redox reaction 'bleach' is formed: Cl2 + 2NaOH --> NaClO + NaCl
Luminul also reacts with certain kinds of chemicals, like bleach rv
It does work but it really depends on what kind of hair you have and how well it reacts/absorbs the bleach and dye.
Bleach consists of chlorine gas dissolved in an alkali-solution, such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH). When chlorine is dissolved in an alkalic solution, hypochlorite ions (OCl-) are formed during an autoredox reaction. Chlorine reacts with sodium hydroxide to sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl). This is a good disinfectant with a stable effect.
i dont think the plant will die of bleach bleach. maybe from just bleach though.
Answer#1No. Chlorine (though deadly) is non-flammable. Pure chlorine can, however react explosively with certain metals. Much the same way metallic sodium reacts with water. BOOM!