Well both are effective, I have used both in my life. I have sensitive skin so I get a skin rash with using bar soap unless it is a goats milk bar. Goats milk bars are very efficient and effective.
liquid soap cleans better. elizabeth clark
No, you cannot use bar soap in place of powdered soap when washing clothes - unless you are washing by hand. Powdered and liquid soaps are designed to disperse quickly into the wash water, bar soaps will not do that. After the washing process, bar soap may remain as a bar (although a bit smaller) and then the rinse steps will not be effective at removing residual soap.
Liquid soap is made to mix with water faster than bar soap. Therefore can break up the molecules of fat faster. However if bar of soap was swished about in very hot water it would form a washing up water just about equal to the liquid soap. This was the way we did it in the 1930's using a small wire basket just big enough to take the bar of soap.
Soap is soap. Both lather so they get where you need if you use it right! Some have added antimicrobial agents, others moisturizesrs but all come solid or liquid. One problem with solid bars? Sometimes you have to clean the bar before using it. One problem with liquid dispensers? Sometimes you don't know you should have cleaned it before using it!
The soap is more dense than the sponge because it has greater mass.
liquid soap is more expensive...plus bar soap lasts longer...
A surfactant is a substance that, when mixed with a liquid, reduces its surface tension. There are usually two or more surfactants in a bar of soap.
liquid soap. by using bar soap u spread germs from one persons body to yours...its also unclean to share foo foo's for the same reason..... so even though you may think that its fine to by bar soap because its soap and it will be clean think again and by liquid soap!
liquid soap is better because who wants to use someone old nasty bar soap with all of that sick sweat for other people not me
liquid soap cleans better. elizabeth clark
A bar of soap isn't in liquid form, so shouldn't be a problem.
No, you cannot use bar soap in place of powdered soap when washing clothes - unless you are washing by hand. Powdered and liquid soaps are designed to disperse quickly into the wash water, bar soaps will not do that. After the washing process, bar soap may remain as a bar (although a bit smaller) and then the rinse steps will not be effective at removing residual soap.
Soap that comes in a dispenser, rather than in bar form.
liquid not solid or gas
it is solid
Soap that comes in a dispenser, rather than in bar form.
Liquid soap is made to mix with water faster than bar soap. Therefore can break up the molecules of fat faster. However if bar of soap was swished about in very hot water it would form a washing up water just about equal to the liquid soap. This was the way we did it in the 1930's using a small wire basket just big enough to take the bar of soap.