No. The peroxide should be new and fresh each time you soak to prevent contamination of the site. The peroxide especially when used on the feet would collect too many germs for it to be sanitary to be used again.
yes, enzymes are reusable.
Peroxisomes are membrane-bound packets of oxidative enzymes. In plant cells, peroxisomes play a variety of roles including converting fatty acids to sugar and assisting chloroplasts in photorespiration. In animal cells, peroxisomes protect the cell from its own production of toxic hydrogen peroxide. As an example, white blood cells produce hydrogen peroxide to kill bacteria. The oxidative enzymes in peroxisomes break down the hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. A good analogy would be something that gets rid of toxic waste.
No. Hurricane names are reused every six years.
yes
Dead batteries can be reused effectively by recycling them at specialized facilities that can extract and reuse their materials, such as lead, acid, and plastic, to create new batteries or other products.
A catalase molecule can be used multiple times to hydrolyze hydrogen peroxide. It speeds up the reaction without being consumed in the process, allowing it to catalyze the decomposition of many molecules of hydrogen peroxide before being reused.
There is no real way to reuse most fuels. An exception would be Hydrogen it can be split off of water and reused quite easily.
Yes, you can save the water used for soaking wood chips. It can be reused for watering plants or for other purposes like cleaning. Just make sure to strain out any debris or impurities before using it again.
Catalase is reusable because it is not consumed in the chemical reaction it catalyzes. It accelerates the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen without being altered itself. This allows catalase to continue its catalytic activity repeatedly.
Catalase is not listed as a reactant because it is an enzyme, which acts as a catalyst to facilitate a chemical reaction without being consumed or altered in the process. Its role is to speed up the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen, but it does not participate in the reaction as a reactant. Enzymes like catalase are essential for increasing reaction rates but remain unchanged and can be reused multiple times.
yes, enzymes are reusable.
No. End of story. Propane can not be reused or recycled.
Peroxisomes are membrane-bound packets of oxidative enzymes. In plant cells, peroxisomes play a variety of roles including converting fatty acids to sugar and assisting chloroplasts in photorespiration. In animal cells, peroxisomes protect the cell from its own production of toxic hydrogen peroxide. As an example, white blood cells produce hydrogen peroxide to kill bacteria. The oxidative enzymes in peroxisomes break down the hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. A good analogy would be something that gets rid of toxic waste.
Recycling is when items that can be reused are reused, and the act of saving those items for reuse. Some of the items that can be reused are paper and most plastics.
No.
No, glow sticks cannot be reused after they have been activated.
Yes, zeolite can be cleaned and reused. It can be cleaned with a saltwater solution, and then it can be used again.