You would get sick and may die but ONLY IF you drank it out of the bottle, not in a pool.
Same thing as mixing ammonia and bleach. You'll get chlorine gas, which was used in WWI for anti-trench warfare.
If the vocal cords are damaged, this can indeed happen. Usually, I would expect this to be related to oral consumption of chlorine bleach, which is potentially lethal. Consider risk for self-harm.
You put a sponge is chlorine bleach to kill mold that mold that is growing in the sponge.
Chlorine bleach is a base so a base and an acid will give you a salt (or ionic compound) and water. In order to come up with the equation for the reaction, you would need the formula of chlorine bleach and of the acid you are reacting it with.
In a way. It causes the bleach to liberate chlorine faster than it normally would; the less chlorine in solution, the lower the effect. The flip side is, hot water itself has a sterilizing effect, but it's not as great as bleach's effect.
Same thing as mixing ammonia and bleach. You'll get chlorine gas, which was used in WWI for anti-trench warfare.
If the vocal cords are damaged, this can indeed happen. Usually, I would expect this to be related to oral consumption of chlorine bleach, which is potentially lethal. Consider risk for self-harm.
You put a sponge is chlorine bleach to kill mold that mold that is growing in the sponge.
Chlorine bleach is a base so a base and an acid will give you a salt (or ionic compound) and water. In order to come up with the equation for the reaction, you would need the formula of chlorine bleach and of the acid you are reacting it with.
it would be hard t bleach a person why why would anyone want to do that?
It would be best to use a non-chlorine bleach, such as oxy-clean. Chlorine bleach tends to leave a yellow tinge onrayon or polyester type fabrics.
It would be best to use a non-chlorine bleach, such as oxy-clean. Chlorine bleach tends to leave a yellow tinge onrayon or polyester type fabrics.
Poo is not a living organism. If there are living organisms in it, mostly bacteria, they would be killed by bleach. That is one of the reasons swimming pools have chlorine in them. Bleach is often used as an in expensive disinfectant and can even be used to render water safe to drink (in very small quantities!).
Okay, well, let's look at it this way. Chlorine is basically bleach. We can drink water with chlorine in it because it's in such a small, minute amount compared to our physical size, that it's not dangerous. But, if you poured, oh, let's say half a cup of bleach into a large glass of water, would you drink that? I'm thinking not. And, I'm also thinking that you wouldn't take a bath in a tub that had about a quart or two of bleach in it. You wouldn't because it is caustic and would burn your skin and throat and eat your stomach lining and you would die from lesions and internal bleeding. Smaller doses may damage and kill more slowly, but it will eventually kill.
Chlorine is poison so the seed that would try to germinate in clorine would most likely die. The rate of growth slows or stops. Chlorine is not helpful to plants what so ever.
In a way. It causes the bleach to liberate chlorine faster than it normally would; the less chlorine in solution, the lower the effect. The flip side is, hot water itself has a sterilizing effect, but it's not as great as bleach's effect.
The hotter the water you use w/ the bleach, the less effective the bleach may be. I'd use it w/ water no hotter the what you would use to bath/shower in.