Yes it kinda is you know the smell and it damages the skin.
Nail polish is a chemical compound, a solvent as acetone for example.
The chemical compounds that make up the clear liquid kills your nail
"Nail polish remover" is primarily the chemical "acetone".
Absolutely, nail polish remover is a volatile chemical, that evaporates quite rapidly.
Nail polish remover contains acetone which is a very good organic solvent. It dissolves the nail polish and helps to clean it off.
It's Solvet!
is ACETONE an ketone compound
Nail polish evaporation is a physical change. When nail polish dries, the solvent (usually a volatile liquid) evaporates, leaving behind the solid components that form the polish film. This process does not alter the chemical composition of the remaining substances but simply changes their state from liquid to gas.
This is probably an example of the sort of ambiguity which is the reason 'physical' and 'chemical' changes tend not to be mentioned outside of early science education. The exact physical make-up of the solute (nail polish) is not changed, but chemical bonds are both broken and made in this process (various intermolecular bonds). The reaction is reversible, but then, all chemical reactions are reversible, but require extra energy put into the system to reduce the entropy. Probably the best approximation would be to say it is a physical change, since all/most of the molecules involved are structurally unchanged.
A dangerous chemical allowed in the US to be in nail polish is dibutyl phthalate (DBP), the substance that makes fingernail polish dry to a smooth varnish.
Hot tub chemical's
there is chemical's in there and it has color in it and can kill you by sniffing it a lot..