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Aerosol Furniture Polish

Uses a unique blend of silicone fluids which gives this polish excellent gloss with minimal smear. [Pg.170]

Add all ingredients in Part A into vessel with good agitation. [Pg.170]

When Part A is mixed thoroughly, add Part B with good agitation. [Pg.170]

The concentrate may be used as a liquid furniture polish or to formulate an aerosol product. [Pg.256]

Formulation E2-7236 is designed for use on such surfaces as appliances, kitchen counter tops, stainless steel, chrome, and plastics. This formulation provides a substrate with a glossy surface and offers some protection from detergent washings. [Pg.256]


Aerosol Furniture Polish (Carbon Dioxide Propel 1 anti... [Pg.113]

Uses Emulsifier for foods, frozen desserts, whipped toppings, shortenings, personal care prods. solubilizer, dispersant in pickles, vitamins yeast defoamer antifog in plastics and aerosol furniture polish Regulatory FDA 21CFR 172.840... [Pg.376]

The different types of furniture polishes include liquid or paste solvent waxes, dear oil polishes, emulsion oil polishes, emulsion wax polishes, and aerosol or spray polishes (3). Nonwoven wipes impregnated with polish ingredients have been targeted at consumers who do not wish to expend the time to dust before polishing (11). Compilations of representative formulas are given in References 3, 4, 12, and 13. Paste waxes contain ca 25 wt % wax, the remainder being solvent. Clear oil polishes contain 10—15 wt % oil and a small amount of wax, the rest being solvent. Aerosol or spray products may contain 2—5 wt % of a silicone polymer, 1—3 wt % wax, 0—30 wt % hydrocarbon solvent, and ca 1 wt % emulsifier. The remainder is water. [Pg.209]

The pressure in an aerosol can of furniture polish is 2.1 atmospheres at a room temperature of 24°C. What is the temperature (in degrees Celsius) when the can is thrown into an incinerator where the temperature increases to 300°C ... [Pg.84]

Carbon dioxide and other compressed gases such as nitrogen and nitrous oxide are used as propellants for topical pharmaceutical aerosols. They are also used in other aerosol products that work satisfactorily with the coarse aerosol spray that is produced with compressed gases, e.g., cosmetics, furniture polish, and window cleaners. ... [Pg.116]

Aerosol packaging has played a smaller role in this area than in others like furniture polishes, air fresheners, and hair care. It has survived most often when a thick foam meant to stick to vertical surfaces is needed as in the case of oven cleaning or bathtub enclosures. In future it can be expected that as packaging innovation continues, specialized formulas will be matched to them to create more convenient and targeted cleaning systems for consumers to use. [Pg.592]

As a result of the Montreal Protocol, almost imperceptibly, aerosol deodorants, furniture polishes, and hair sprays were reformulated with altemative, often inflammable propellants, and CFCs were phased out as refrigerants. Such replacement propellants were not suitable for use in pMDIs for reasons of flammability and toxicity, and the Montreal Protocol recognized that some temporary exemption from the protocol may be necessary to allow identification of altemative propellants. It provided for this eventuality by means of an essential-use exemption clause. Essentiality exists when ... [Pg.374]


See other pages where Aerosol Furniture Polish is mentioned: [Pg.170]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.372]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.434]    [Pg.678]   


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