Well its simple really, hand sanitizer sanitizes the hand, and antibacterial cleaners clean your hands and go against bacteria.
need to know the differences between the two
detergent cleans "removes dirt" sanitizer actually disinfects
detergent remove dirt & risidue of products from surface of equipment while sanitizer kill almost microorganisms present on surface. If you know more than please answer.............
The active ingredient, denatured alcohol is the same. For practical purposes there is no difference worth mentioning. Foaming agent and a special foaming nozzle makes the appararent diffence.
When it comes to vacuum cleaners, many people feel like they need to purchase brand name vacuum cleaners to get the results they want. However, this is not always the case. The reality is that you can find a number of great generic vacuum cleaners out there that perform at the same level of brand name cleaners. The only real difference is that you'll end up paying a fraction of the price with generic cleaners.
Disinfectants are antibacterial agents that are applied to inorganic surfaces. They should generally be distinguished from antiseptics that destroy pathogens on living tissue.
bacteriostatic antibacterial agents are these that inhibits the growth of bacteria usually by inhibition of protein synthesis. Bacterisidal antibacterial agents are these that cause apoptosis( brake down) of bacteria due to braking down the bacterial cell wall or membrane.
It appears that the 4870MZ is the replacement for the 4870GZ vacuum cleaner, which will eventually be going out of stock.
mostly antiviral immunity is the result of cell mediated immunity and antibacterial immunity is result of humoral immunity
Soaps are formed by the reaction between an alkali and the fatty acids found in vegetable oils and animal fats. Detergents are synthetic cleaners so by definition detergents are “soapless”.
Generaly a lot of gneric cleaners are the same as name brand but in a different package so just check the ingredients.
Your question is not that clear. However, antibacterial drugs are used to defeat the actions of infectious bacteriae. There are, however some bacteria, such as MRSA and "super-infections" which are highly resistant to antibacterial infusions. This usually calls for a "cocktail" dose of antibiotics. In the normal course of antibacterial treatments, however, most antibacterial drugs usually succeed.