Chlorine is an oxidizing agent. It oxidizes the dye or pigment of the cloth and fades the colour.
no..........
Spray-on tan, yes. A real tan, no.
When doing laundry, chlorine bleach is used for white clothing only. Non-chlorine bleach is used for other color-safe clothing. Chlorine bleach should always be diluted and never put directly on the clothing; it will weaken the fibers. Chlorine bleach can also be used in the home to sanitize and clean. Be sure to use only on color-safe, non-porous items, such as a toilet or bathtub. Wear gloves when using and always ventilate the room you are in. Also, avoid getting any on your clothes as even one drop will permenantly stain.
Chlorine dissolves in water. The solution is known as chlorinated water and freshly prepared solution of chlorine water contains HCL and HOCL. Chlorine is a strong oxidising agent because hypochlorous acid is unstable and decomposes into HCL and nascent oxygen.
Free Chlorine is the Chlorine which is free to do its work in the pool, as opposed to Combined Chlorine which is chlorine that has combined with contaminants and is tied up and ineffective as a sanitizer in the pool. Sometimes you will see it abbreviated as FAC, which stands for Free Available Chlorine.
You can use a color safe bleach alternative, but traditional chlorine bleach will fade or leave white spots on your clothes.
no..........
fade them
Chlorine is bleach and it could bleach out your clothes if concentration is high.
yeah!
Wash less.
Spray-on tan, yes. A real tan, no.
because of the exposure to sunlight
because of photodegration
electromagnetic radiation, a.k.a. light.
Not at all - you have to use the directed amount
no! it also doesn't fade them like chlorine (or your skin, hair ...)