Generally not. It is more often a reducer.
An oxidiser, or an oxidising agent. Spelled with a 'z' if you're American.
Clorox bleach is an oxidizer because it tends to cause other substances to lose electrons and undergo oxidation reactions.
The most common lime water reaction is with carbon dioxide, denoted by the equation: Ca(OH)2 (aq) + CO2 (g) → CaCO3 (s) + H2O (l) Since this is not a redox reaction (no oxidation numbers change), lime water is not an oxidizer.
Oxidizer
An oxidizer is a substance that can react with another material by giving up oxygen atoms, causing the other material to combust or burn. Oxidizers support combustion by providing the oxygen necessary for a fire to burn.
No, oxygen is an oxidizer. Combustion reactions are oxidation-reduction reactions. The reaction could not happen without the oxidizer, but oxygen cannot be considered the fuel. The fuel is the compound which is being oxidized: i.e. Carbon oxidized to carbon dioxide.
A solid rocket engine uses a fuel and an oxidizer. The oxidizer when burned delivers oxygen to the fuel so that it can burn. Most rockets use oxidizers because when the rocket burns it uses so much oxygen that they need a readily available supply.
UVA acts primarly as the oxidizer
Oxidizer - album - was created in 2004.
An oxidiser, or an oxidising agent. Spelled with a 'z' if you're American.
Sugar burns clean when the right amounts of it is mixed with the opposing oxidizer. Sugar burns into water vapor and carbon dioxide, and leaves behind the remains of the oxidizer reaction. There is no flammable product that sugar leaves behind after it burns. Even if it does, you cannot collect it, as the fire from the burning sugar would just go on to ignite that.
Clorox bleach is an oxidizer because it tends to cause other substances to lose electrons and undergo oxidation reactions.
The most common lime water reaction is with carbon dioxide, denoted by the equation: Ca(OH)2 (aq) + CO2 (g) → CaCO3 (s) + H2O (l) Since this is not a redox reaction (no oxidation numbers change), lime water is not an oxidizer.
Oxidizer
oxidizer
No, it is a reducing agent
Yes, "Baquashock", "Baquacil Shock", and "Baquacil Shock and Oxidizer" are all synonymous. Baquacil has been changing the names through the evolution but it's the same product. Most companies are now selling it as "Oxidizer (Shock)" - http://www.backyardexpress.com/baquaspa-oxidizer-shock.html