Fluorine is commonly used in shampoo, spermicide, detergent and laxatives
Yes but it is expensive and has perfume and will make too much suds. (I do wash some of my woolens in shampoo if I an on a trip and I can not get to my usual wool wash compound)
You sure can! The ratio is 1 tablespoon per quart of water. It does work but not as well as carpet shampoo. I would use it if you run out of carpet shampoo. Try not to add much more detergent.
The most common ingredient in shampoos is detergent known as straight chain alkyl benzene sulfonates. These detergents works best in water and since away without leaving a scum.
Bleach. Also, ammonia is a base that is found in many cleaning products.
Modern shampoo is a detergent.
what i mean is...is there detergent in this dog shampoo?
PLEASE USE SHAMPOO SO YOU DONT SMELL ! ! !
Shampoo is a detergent, so it dissolves the cell membranes, allowing access to the DNA inside the cell.
The word shampoo in English language usage dates back to 1762, with the meaning "to massage". Kasey Hebert from London, England was the first known maker of shampoo. In the early 1930s, the first synthetic detergent shampoo "Drene" was introduced, although it still had some disadvantages. The 1960s brought the detergent technology we use today.
Fluorine is commonly used in shampoo, spermicide, detergent and laxatives
shampoo soap perfume..or there household aroma. even detergent
Yes but it is expensive and has perfume and will make too much suds. (I do wash some of my woolens in shampoo if I an on a trip and I can not get to my usual wool wash compound)
You sure can! The ratio is 1 tablespoon per quart of water. It does work but not as well as carpet shampoo. I would use it if you run out of carpet shampoo. Try not to add much more detergent.
toothpaste, mouthwash, dishwashing liquid, laundry detergent, shampoo, conditioner, body wash, gasoline
You could, but I certainly wouldn't recommend it. The detergent in Tide is intended for laundry and much stronger than the detergent in shampoo. The effects would likely be less than satisfactory and your hair would likely be extremely dry.
The simple answer is, it isn't. I don't use shampoo since I discovered that merely washing it under the shower along with massaging with the fingers gets my hair perfectly clean and soft as if it had been washed with shampoo. The chances are that shampoo, detergent made from fossil fuel oil, actually damaged the hair follicles by removing too much of the natural oil.