Soap is made up of a hydrophobic carbon chain with a hydrophilic (polar) head. This carbon chain attaches to the bacteria/germs and the water pulls the molecules away with the germs attached to it down the drain.
In essence, the germs are not 'killed' but merely removed.
it can kill most of the germs but it is not guaranteed. it will probably kill about 99 percent of bacteria and germs with only 1 percent to spread again.
99.9%
Yes, that is the purpose of antibacterial soap.
All soap kills germs -- that's why we use soap instead of just rinsing off with plain water.
because hot water kills more germs than washing it with cold water soap is also needed to kill more germs
Yes but it doen't leave a fruity scent.
Soap kills 79% of germs off of your hands.
Soap can kill germs but can't get rid of them permanently. They will keep coming back. Don't buy 'can kill 99.9% of germs because not only does it kill bad germs, but it kills the good ones too.
99.9%
town
Yes, that is the purpose of antibacterial soap.
All soap kills germs -- that's why we use soap instead of just rinsing off with plain water.
no
No
It seems they can get you sick but not kill you
Some do and some don't
No, cooking grease can not kill germs. Try using a different method like using soap or hand sanitizer.
yep