At its simplest, it means keeping objects clean, preventing bright sunlight from bleaching them and storing breakable pieces in a safe place. |
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When using washing-machine water, combine the rinse-cycle water with the wash-cycle water to dilute the detergent and bleaching agents. |
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A cleanser, astringent, gentle abrasive and mild bleaching agent, baking soda is a true all-purpose beauty aid. |
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Many cleaners are basically bleaches, containing bleaching agents, such as sodium hypochlorite or oxalic acid. |
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The whole process involved first bleaching my hair to a shade lighter than my natural jet-black, and then applying the blue hair colour. |
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As chlorine is a bleaching agent, this may also have effects on the health of your hair and skin. |
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The main ingredients are also used in laundry detergents to brighten colors, and in existing skin bleaching products for liver spots and scars. |
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Aerial surveys found that nearly 60 percent of the reef area in the marine park was heat-stressed to some extent as indicated by bleaching. |
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If stains remain after several washings, try bleaching white cottons and linens with chlorine or sodium perborate bleach. |
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Haircolor experts will often use moist heat or infra-red lamps to speed up the bleaching process and minimize the potential bleach damage. |
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The ideal blemish bleaching creams only contain natural lighteners proven safe and effective for skin. |
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Light's bleaching glare may saturate the picture plane, obscuring tone, details and minute particulars. |
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There are several possible mechanisms of photochemical bleaching, of which the commonest is probably photo-oxidation. |
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In the early 1990s, 46 of the 145 pulp mills in Canada used various chlorine bleaching processes to whiten paper. |
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The reason a bleaching process is used is to increase absorbency of rayon, a common component of tampons. |
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In the evening I started putting down some jottings for an article that I'm writing on the skin bleaching problem that we have here. |
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The silvery moonlight dappled Luka's skin like sunlight, bleaching it to a state of porcelain perfection. |
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These versatile molecules function as catalysts in the hydrogen peroxide bleaching process. |
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Most people are familiar with shaving, bleaching, plucking and depilatories, which chemically dissolve hair. |
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I started at the bay windows, scrubbing the grime away and bleaching the suspected mold. |
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As for the bleaching agents, the hydrosulphites, particularly sodium and zinc are preferred. |
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I refix after bleaching, then soak the print in hypo clearing agent for 3 minutes. |
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I've made a couple of gaffes with experiments in all-night bleaching lately. |
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Small but prolonged rises in sea temperature force coral colonies to expel their symbiotic, food-producing algae, a process known as bleaching. |
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After bleaching, the gradient to the cytoplasm is gradually equilibrated, leading to a slight recovery of the nuclear EGFP concentration. |
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Ironically, excessive bleaching can turn pearly whites into an unnatural translucent blue. |
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It works well when hypodermically injected to tissue devoid of circulation and attains moderate bleaching effect when used as a pack. |
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They are kept in water mixed with some chemicals for a day and later sun-dried on getting washed with bleaching powder. |
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If iron content is high in well water, it can be treated with bleaching powder, we are told. |
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Even bleaching powder would not be available in public health centres for putting in well water. |
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In India alone it has already distributed 6,000 water storage tanks, 32 million tonnes of bleaching powder and three million chlorine tablets. |
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He said the department had already made available bleaching powder to those concerned. |
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The filtered water is then treated with bleaching powder to get rid of bacterial impurities. |
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Thin sandstone lenses, which showed bleaching and epidotization, were present within the lode. |
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Quickly, she unbraids her hair and blends the bleaching mixture, getting him to help her apply it. |
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The chemical is used as a bleaching agent in most household cleaning products and as a disinfectant for water and swimming pools. |
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If you have old discolored plastic fillings, these will not get lighter from bleaching, and should be replaced after the process is completed. |
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Hong Kong newspapers show city workers hosing down walkways, disinfecting escalator railings and bleaching public washrooms. |
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Morgan stopped and looked up into the sky, the moon shining directly on his long hair, bleaching it so white, he looked like his brother. |
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If the hair is fairly fine and downy, either on the upper lip or the cheeks, then bleaching is by far the best solution. |
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Baths foreman Frank Hardcastle had a four-day job of cleaning the tiles and bleaching the pool floor. |
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The application by hand of various mordants was part of a complex process of dyeing, applying and clearing resists, washing, and bleaching. |
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On a global scale, coral bleaching is the largest threat to the world's coral reefs. |
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They are affected by coral bleaching, they're affected by crown-of-thorn starfish, and a lot of things that make coral reefs sick makes the staghorn coral sick first. |
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Although tabun can be destroyed by its reaction with bleaching powder, that reaction causes another chemical reaction that produces the deadly blood agent cyanogen chloride. |
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Jade and Pearl shapes natural sea sponges to fit a woman's body, absorbing flow and likewise averting the dilemma of throwaways, synthetic fibers and bleaching. |
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One can also get various varieties of soaps, bleaching powders, starch powder and different varieties of pickles made by the self-employment units funded by the Khadi board. |
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Industry had already understood before the First World War how to make time-consuming bleaching a thing of the past by inventing laundry blue, a powder based on indigo. |
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In particular, there is likely to be a reduction in water for southern and eastern Australia, with more fires and heatwaves, fewer frosts, less snow and more coral bleaching. |
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This can be made clean by bleaching it, boiling it and filtering it. |
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Hydrogen Peroxide is used for its oxidizing properties in many applications, including paper and textile bleaching, detergence, and effluent treatment. |
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After extensive aerial surveys, scientists in a joint survey of the GBR this year discovered that coral bleaching has affected more than 60 per cent of the reef system. |
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Histochemical stains confirmed the presence of melanin, since brown pigment removable by permanganate bleaching was demonstrated by Fontana-Masson stain. |
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Put one teaspoon of the bleaching powder in the bottle 600 ml of water. |
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The extractible substances in pulps are mainly resins, waxes, fatty acids and similar components of wood not removed in pulping and bleaching processes. |
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Internal stains in teeth, for example tetracycline stains, are extremely resistant to bleaching because the stain is so deeply ingrained in the teeth. |
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Once again, using bleaching gels in this way may not work for certain types of discolouration, such as that caused by metal fillings or damaged blood vessels inside a tooth. |
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Without the bleaching of the sun his hair seemed dishwater blond, certainly not golden. |
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All of the oxidizable pulp components consume some amount of bleaching chemicals. |
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Toncil, which is used as a bleaching agent in industries, is frequently used by profiteers to make the PDS kerosene colourless. |
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Sodium hypochlorite is the active constituent in chlorine bleach, a powerful oxidizer and bleaching agent. |
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The hydrogen peroxide essentially acts as a bleaching agent, turning the hair growing from the follicles either gray or white. |
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Prescription bleaching kits contain higher levels of carbamide or hydrogen peroxide than their non-prescription counterparts. |
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Other threats include hurricanes, along with global warming and the resulting increase in ocean temperatures, which causes coral bleaching. |
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Topical bleaching agents such as hydroquinone, kojic acid and azelaic acid can reduce signs of aging. |
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Early bleaching of linen was done using milk but this was a slow process and the use of vitriol sped up the bleaching process. |
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The earliest form of bleaching involved spreading fabrics and cloth out in a bleachfield to be whitened by the action of the sun and water. |
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As a mixture with lime and calcium chloride, it is marketed as chlorine powder or bleach powder for water treatment and as a bleaching agent. |
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At that time this involved treatment with stale urine and leaving the cloth exposed to sunlight for many months in so called bleaching fields. |
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Charles left his well paid weaving position to try to develop improved bleaching methods. |
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This led him to start his own bleaching fields in 1788, at Darnley, near Barrhead, Renfrewshire. |
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Having acquired his bleachfield, Charles turned his mind and energy to developing ways to shorten the time required in bleaching. |
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The process involved reacting chlorine and dry slaked lime to form bleaching powder, a mixture of calcium hypochlorite and other derivatives. |
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Belmont was the site of a bleaching and dyeing works, powered by water from Eagley Brook which powered mills along its valley. |
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Did he really have vitiligo or was he just bleaching his skin? |
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They measured bleaching efficacy by quantifying norbixin, an apocarotenoid found in annatto. |
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The alteration zone starts at 765 metres in the form of bleaching, followed by silicification from 826 to 839 metres. |
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Bleaching liquid whey and the type of bleaching agent used can affect the flavor of whey protein concentrate. |
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Apply the solution with a paintbrush, but be aware that it is such a bleaching agent that it will bleach areas you may not want bleached. |
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The load contained the chemical sodium hydrochlorite which is used as a disinfectant or bleaching agent. |
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Hydrogen peroxide and benzoyl peroxide are two commercially approved chemical agents for bleaching liquid whey. |
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The oil is added to the saturated liquor, which is afterwards introduced into the kier. There is no change required in the bleaching operation. |
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The bleaching responses in a subsequent peroxide stage of chelated pulps were compared. |
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Once coral bleaching begins, corals tend to continue to bleach even if the stressor is removed. |
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He passed the chlorine into a weak solution of alkali, and obtained a turbid solution that appeared to have good bleaching properties. |
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They are also used in many industrial processes, notably in the bleaching of wood pulp. |
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Enzymes are used widely in industrial applications for everything from pulp bleaching to meat tenderizers. |
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In pulp and paper industry, a similar kappa number is used to measure how much bleaching a pulp requires. |
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Originally with chlorine bleaching the required quantity of chlorine could be then calculated, although modern methods use multiple stages. |
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In 2005 the Rainbow Warrior II ran aground on and damaged the Tubbataha Reef in the Philippines while inspecting the reef for coral bleaching. |
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The loss of Symbiodinium from the host is known as coral bleaching, a condition which leads to the deterioration of a reef. |
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Coral bleaching is another manifestation of the problem and is showing up in reefs across the planet. |
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The traditional sequence of pre-treatment is shortened by single stage bleaching, where kiers are still in use. |
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Hence, these coral reefs are not affected by coral bleaching caused by rise in temperature as elsewhere in the indopacific coral sea. |
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This hands-on laboratory based workshop will provide a broad overview of pulping, bleaching, chemical recovery, recycling, papermaking and converting. |
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Peracetic acid is known to be one of the strongest oxidizing agent with a range of applications including disinfection, sanitization, sterilization, and bleaching. |
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An important aspect of the weaving industry was bleaching cloth. |
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The bleaching of visual purple is limited to the area exposed to light, so that an optogram or image of the luminous object, such as a window, can be obtained. |
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He first produced a modern bleaching liquid in 1789 in his laboratory on the quay Javel in Paris, France, by passing chlorine gas through a solution of sodium carbonate. |
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The blast was in a shed used to manufacture bleaching powder. |
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Indonesia's coral reefs are located in the heart of the Coral Triangle and have been victim to destructive fishing, unregulated tourism, and bleaching due to climatic changes. |
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It is used as such in some industrial dyeing processes to eliminate excess dye, residual oxide, and unintended pigments and for bleaching wood pulp. |
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Oxidizing bleaching agents that do not contain chlorine are usually based on peroxides such as hydrogen peroxide, sodium percarbonate and sodium perborate. |
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For example, the use of elemental chlorine in the bleaching of wood pulp produces organochlorines and persistent organic pollutants, including dioxins. |
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The cloth was singed to remove superfluous fluff by being passed over heated copper plates and then boiled in bleaching keirs with lime or caustic soda. |
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The bleaching process has been known for millennia, but the chemicals currently used for bleaching resulted from the work of several 18th century scientists. |
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Oxidizing bleaching agents constitute a major portion of bleaching agents. |
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He discovered bleaching powder and founded an industrial dynasty. |
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The Baykalsk Pulp and Paper Mill was constructed in 1966, directly on the shoreline, bleaching paper with chlorine and discharging waste into Baikal. |
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