toothpaste stops acid attack because it has special features in it that the scientists put in it, it can prevent attacking because of the features. you cant find the features as they are very speacial. the toothpaste you should buy is the three srip toothpaste by colgate.
NEUTRAL
This is because the toothpaste has some amount of acid or alkaline in it .
No amino acid is coded for. It is a stop codon that instructs to stop the process of translation.
The fizzing stop when the chemical reaction is totally finished.
A stop codon (UGA, UAA, UAG) only codes for a stop. No amino acid results from a stop codon.
Crest toothpaste is an acid.
Toothpaste does not have acid in it, Toothpaste is an Alkalie.
toothpaste is an alkali because bacteria uses acid to eat away at teeth so toothpaste manufactures include alkali in their recipe to neutralize this acid, it also works as a cleansing agent to keep our teeth white! - hope this helps
A base
NEUTRAL
It cannot have sulphuric acid because sulphuric acid is one of the greatest and dangerous acid of the world, it can easily damage things, so it won't be put in the toothpaste for you to use, I guess.
yes toothpaste is an alkaline because the alkaline overpowers the acid in the toothpaste
Acid eats at enamel.
because it is so yea
base
Toothpaste is a mild base, mostly because one of its "abrasives" is baking soda.
Toothpaste has fluoride which affects the bacteria that cause tooth decay, but its primary action is to incorporate into the tooth structure (enamel and dentin) making the tooth more resistant to acid attack by decay-causing bacteria. It actually repairs (remineralizes) the tooth enamel that gets damaged by the acid producing bacteria present in almost everyone's mouth.