Yes it is alcohol, all alcohol is flammable
Ethanol SD Alcohol 40 is a specific grade of denatured alcohol consisting of 99.9% ethanol mixed with denaturants to make it unfit for consumption. The precise formulation may vary among manufacturers to meet regulatory requirements.
SD Alcohol 40-B refers to specially denatured alcohol, which is denatured with denatonium benzoate, the bitterest tasting known substance. In the United States, It is denatured so that it does not fall under the tax rules of drinking alcohol. See: http://sci-toys.com/ingredients/denatonium_benzoate.html
No
SD Alcohol 38-B is mostly ethanol, but certainly not ethanol derived from grapes or dates. Rather, it is probably derived from the much cheaper corn. "SD" stands for "specially denatured." Denaturing happens to alcohol to make it unfit to drink, often by adding methanol, which is poisonous. SD alcohols have little or no methanol, making them not a health hazard, but they generally contain bitterants to make them unpleasant to drink. another example of an SD Alcohol 38-B is Listerine, which is extremely unpleasant to drink, but not poisonous.
3a^2 + 3a^2 = 6a^2 3a^2 - 3a^2 = 0 3a^2 x 3a^2 = 9a^4 3a^2 divided by 3a^2 = 1
Triclosan, water, magnesium, sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate, ammonium laureth sulfate, lauryl polyglucose, lauramidopropylanine oxide, SD Alcohol 3A, sodium xylene sulfonate, sodium chloride, fragrance, pentasodium pentetate, sodium bisulfite, quaternium 15, D&C Orange 4.
Considering that Lysol contains Ethanol and SD Alcohol, it is indeed flammable.
99 % minus whatever the de-natured solution is.
7a minus 2, if "3a-2" means 3a minus 2. 3a plus 1 and 1-3rd in parenthesis times 3a, if "3a-2" means 3a squared. a plus 3a squared plus 3a = 1-3rd times 3a plus 3a times 3a plus 1 times 3a = 3a plus 1 and 1-3rd in parenthesis times 3a
If you mean: 4a +29 -3a -a +3a then it simplifies to 29 +3a
SD Alcohol 40-B is a specific type of denatured alcohol that is used in cosmetics and personal care products. Alcohol Denat, on the other hand, is a general term for denatured alcohol used in formulations. Both serve as solvents in hair spray products, helping other ingredients to disperse and dry quickly on the hair.