Ammonia is a colorless gas with a distinct, pungent odor, commonly found in various household products, such as cleaners and fertilizers. While it can be present indoors due to these products, it is not an indoor substance by nature; it is often used in industrial processes and agricultural applications. Ventilation is important when using ammonia indoors to prevent harmful exposure.
Ammonia would not be a good choice for most carpets. It would also be a possible cause of respiratory irritation to spread that much ammonia in an indoor area.
A Hepa Air Purifier uses a specialized Hepa filter to clean dust, contaminants, and allergans from the air, while an Ammonia Air Purifier uses chemical mechanisms to remove amines and ammonias from the air.
99.95%(pure ammonia) or better is Refridgeration grade ammonia.
Ammonia is a gas - it can't be "straight".
Ammonia is ammonia and ammonia is toxic. Non-toxic ammonia does not exist. Ammonia can be diluted in water or held in a sealed container, but it's still toxic.
the common name of ammonia is more or less ammonia since it not it's chemical name and ammonia is also a baking soda
Anhydrous ammonia is pure ammonia. Under normal conditions it is a gas, but it is usually stored as a liquid under pressure. Aqueous ammonia is ammonia dissolved in water. Household ammonia is a 3% solution of aqueous ammonia.
Ammonia is a noun.
Indoor sports are just indoor sports. But if you want to get specific then you might say indoor soccer, indoor tennis, indoor football, etc.
It is regular old ammonia -- NH3. "Ammonia-D" is a trademarked name for ammonia in Windex.
Ammonia is a compound, not a mixture. Household ammonia is a homogeneous mixture of ammonia and water.
Ammonia is NH3.