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XeF6.
Fluoride is added to drinking water to prevent tooth decay
Sodium fluoride dissolves in water but does not chemically react with water.
Distillation does remove at least some fluoride - this is why a dentist will recommend fluoride treatment at your 6-month dental cleaning if you drink distilled or filtered water. However, to get all the fluoride out the water would have to be deionized.
But merely boiling the water will not eliminate the fluoride and can in fact concentrate it because you have the same amount of fluoride in less water. You can distill the water. Meaning you can boil the water then capture the steam, which will be pure. But the process is expensive. You need special filters to remove the fluoride.
XeF6.
yes
Not unless it says "Fluoride" somewhere on the bottle. If it is truly spring or glacier water it has no fluoride added naturally. If you're asking about the "Glacier" branded vending machines found outside of supermarkets, they do not dispense water from glaciers. They are connected to municipal water supplies. They use a multi-step purification process to purify the tap water. One of the steps in their purification process is reverse osmosis. Reverse osmosis can be effective in removing fluoride from water. It's likely that some percentage of the fluoride added to municipal water supplies will remain. How large a percentage depends on the type of membrane used in the process.
No. Boiling water will not remove fluoride. Distilling it will.
Pure water does not contain fluoride, but much drinking water does contain fluoride that is deliberately added to reduce tooth decay of children who drink the water. Some drinking water supplies also contain fluoride naturally.
Fluoride is added to drinking water to prevent tooth decay
approx. 27.659%
Sodium fluoride dissolves in water but does not chemically react with water.
Yes hydrogen fluoride can be dissolved in pure water.
Fluoride is added to public drinking water to help prevent cavities.
usually bottled water does not have fluoride in it unless they advertise that it does (like nursery water or water specifically for kids they may add fluoride to those)
Distillation does remove at least some fluoride - this is why a dentist will recommend fluoride treatment at your 6-month dental cleaning if you drink distilled or filtered water. However, to get all the fluoride out the water would have to be deionized.