Propyleneglycol is used as wetting agent and surfactant in toothpaste.
aluminumcalciumsodiumtinzincstrontiumpotassiumNone of these are in the pure metallic form, but instead are parts of various compounds serving a variety of different purposes.
The active ingredient of toothpaste is fluorine ions, which is not a base. Although there may be basic compounds added to toothpaste in order to make it a unique product according to the brands.
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which element present in our toothpaste protects out tooth from the tooth decay?
Sugar is an organic compound with the major ingredient sucrose. There might be some other carbohydrates in little amounts. There is no sodium acetate present in sugar.
The elements present in toothpaste can vary, but common ingredients include fluorine, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. The number of atoms in toothpaste would be a combination of these elements depending on the specific chemical composition of the toothpaste formula.
Calcium and many others which i don't know
Flouride
Adipose tissue is fat tissue, lipids are therefore present in large amounts.
They use it to correct the toothpaste's pH. Here's the deal: When toothpaste engineers create a new toothpaste, they use all sorts of chemicals to make it, and when they're done they want a product with a slightly alkaline pH. When you brush your teeth with alkaline toothpaste, it neutralizes cavity-causing mouth acids. They're looking for a pH of somewhere around 8 or 9--alkaline enough to neutralize the cavity-causing acids; not alkaline enough to strip the skin off your tongue. Cool so far? You're a toothpaste engineer. You have created WikiAnswers toothpaste, and the first batch you made has a pH of 8.2. Now your challenge is to make every other batch have that same pH, because if you don't people won't like your toothpaste--you'll get letters saying the new tube doesn't taste like the old one, that it doesn't foam up like the old one, that it hurts your mouth, whatever. But what's the problem? The ingredients you use aren't going to be exactly the same every time. This month, the ingredients might give you a pH of 8.2, and six months from now you might get a pH of 8.1. So, to fix the pH you'll add just a little bit of sodium hydroxide. It doesn't take much--maybe 100 grams in a 1000-kilogram batch of toothpaste. And that's why they use sodium hydroxide for this--it's so strong the amount you'd need to do the job wouldn't change the consistency of the toothpaste, whereas if you used borax, a very mild alkali, you'd have to add so much of it you'd make the toothpaste stiffer.
No, human toothpaste should never be used on cats. Fluoride is present in most toothpastes and is toxic if ingested, especially to such a small animal like a cat. Cats cannot spit out toothpaste while their teeth are being brushed. Pet toothpaste is free of Fluoride and is completely safe for an animal to ingest.
No, human toothpaste should never be used on cats. Fluoride is present in most toothpastes and is toxic if ingested, especially to such a small animal like a cat. Cats cannot spit out toothpaste while their teeth are being brushed. Pet toothpaste is free of Fluoride and is completely safe for an animal to ingest.