Different detergent strengths will create different bubble strengths
The oral drug Fentanyl is made by many different companies, but Duragesic (brand name for Fentanyl Transdermal patches) is made and distributed by Ortho-McNeil/Janssen Pharmaceuticals.
The different strengths of a magnet are determined by the magnetic fluids it produces. The strengths of a magnet are seen in motors, refrigerators and dynamos.
Different detergent strengths will create different bubble strengths. This will also help increase the size of the bubbles that are created with the mixture.
Fentanyl is an opioid with a structure very different from that of other opioids such as heroin and oxycodone. Thus, if fentanyl were to be tested for on a drug test, it would show up only as fentanyl, not opiates (morphine, codeine, heroin) or other opioids (oxycodone, hydrocodone, etc.).
The patches come in 12 mcg/h, 25 mcg/h, 50 mcg/h, 75 mcg/h, and 100 mcg/h strengths. The generic of Duragesic is Ratio-Fentanyl and about one-third the cost.
The melting point depends on the strengths of the forces between the particles. Different substances have different strengths and types of force.
Yes you can - I've done it for years, as the mechanism in Fiorinal w/ Codeine is different for dealing with migraines and other pain than Fentanyl is.
Fentanyl is an opioid with a structure very different from that of other opioids such as heroin and oxycodone. Thus, if fentanyl were to be tested for on a drug test, it would show up only as fentanyl, not opiates (morphine, codeine, heroin) or other opioids (oxycodone, hydrocodone, etc.).
Fentanyl will show up as fentanyl but this is almost never tested for. It is a special test which is also expensive and I would only suspect it being tested for if one had access to it, i.e. anesthestiologist.
yes
There is no fentanyl in a lidocaine patch. It is a lidocaine patch not a fentanyl patch.