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Sulfur disinfectant

In addition to conventional pesticides such as insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides, there are other chemicals classified as pesticides and regulated under FIFRA. These chemicals include wood preservatives, disinfectants (excluding chlorine), and sulfur. In the United States these chemicals have aimual usage of about 500,000 t, which is equal to conventional pesticides. [Pg.213]

Inorganic Acids. Strong inorganic acids have little antimicrobial activity in themselves but inhibit microorganism growth by lowering the pH. Disinfectant toilet bowl cleaners that contain 9.5% HCl or more are antimicrobial. Carbonic acid [463-79-6] in soft drinks provides some antibacterial preservation. Sulfurous acid [7782-99-2] is an effective preservative used to preserve wines (see Wine), fmit juices (qv), and dried fmits. [Pg.127]

The calcium hypochlorite or sodium dichloroisocyanurate used to disinfect swimming pools also bleaches hair, although contrary to popular belief it does not turn the hair green. It simply allows the green copper sulfate from the water to show up in the hair. The copper sulfate comes from the reaction of the copper pipes in the plumbing to the sulfuric acid used to neutralize the alkalies in the chlorination chemicals. [Pg.194]

Phenol was originally recovered during the coking of coal, essentially being a by-product. Eventually, commercial routes were developed based on benzene (from coal or petroleum) for example, sulfonation of benzene to ben-zenesulfonic acid followed by reaction with water to phenol plus regenerated sulfuric acid. Phenol is used to make plastics (phenol-formaldehyde and epoxy resins) and textile fibers (nylon). Phenol is also used in solution as a general disinfectant for cleaning toilets, stables, floors, drains, etc. and is used both internally and externally as a disinfectant for animals. [Pg.87]

Hydrogen sulfide has a variety of industrial uses. Its major use is in the production of elemental sulfur and sulfuric acid. Hydrogen sulfide is also used in the manufacture of sodium sulfide and thiophenes. It is used in metallurgy and in the production of heavy water for the nuclear industry (Beauchamp et al. 1984 HSDB 1998). In the past, hydrogen sulfide was used as an agricultural disinfectant. [Pg.136]

Sulfur dioxide is an economically important gas that is used as a refrigerant, disinfectant, and reducing atmosphere for preserving food. Although it is also used in the manufacture of many other sulfur compounds, the most important use of S02 is as a precursor in producing sulfuric acid. It can be obtained by burning sulfur, but it is also produced in numerous other reactions. Sulfites react with acids by liberating so2. [Pg.529]

Used industrially as a chemical intermediate in the production of rayon, carbon tetrachloride, xanthogenates, flotation agents, and pesticides used in the cold vulcanization of vulcanized rubber, in adhesive compositions for food packaging as a solvent for phosphorus, sulfur, selenium, bromine, iodine, fats, resins, rubbers, waxes, lacquers, camphor, resins and in the production of optical glass, paints, enamels, varnishes, paint removers, tallow, putty preservatives, rubber cement, soil disinfectants, explosives, rocket fuel, and electronic vacuum tubes. [Pg.348]

Disinfection, 8 605-672. See also Disinfection processes antimicrobial nanoemulsion technology, 8 630-631 bromine, 8 621-626 bromine chloride, 8 626-628 chlorination, 8 610-615 chlorine dioxide, 8 617-619 dechlorination with sulfur dioxide, 8 615-617... [Pg.280]

What to do Look for resistant cultivars. In fall or late winter, prune off infected limbs, 6-12 in. (15-30 cm) below the knots disinfect pruners in between cuts with a 10% bleach solution (1 part bleach to 9 parts water). Destroy the prunings. Remove any wild plum or cherry trees nearby. For persistent infections, apply 2 sprays of lime-sulfur, 7 days apart, before the buds begin to grow in spring. [Pg.322]

Uses Manufacture of viscose rayon, cellophane, flotation agents, ammonium salts, carbon tetrachloride, carbanilide, paints, enamels, paint removers, varnishes, tallow, textiles, rocket fuel, soil disinfectants, electronic vacuum tubes, herbicides grain fumigants solvent for fats, resins, phosphorus, sulfur, bromine, iodine, and rubber petroleum and coal tar refining solvent and eluant for organics adsorbed on charcoal for air analysis. [Pg.257]

Bacillus subtilis defense mechanism, 610 bovine semm albumin y-radiation, 614 generation inhibition, 612 hydroperoxide synthesis, 315, 320 ludgenin oxidation, 645, 1250-1 luminol oxidation, 643, 644, 1242-4 organic sulfur compounds, 1032-9 ozone water disinfection, 606 peroxynitrite generation, 10, 611-12 Superoxide dismutase (SOD)... [Pg.1491]

Other burners are used for low capacity operations. A cascade or checker burner, in which molten sulfur flows down through brick checkerwork countercurrent to a flow of air, is used in small units with a sulfur trioxide converter to condition gases entering electrostatic precipitators at boiler plants operating on low sulfur coal. A small pan burner, which is fed with solid, low carbon sulfur, is used to produce sulfur dioxide for solution in irrigation water to control the pH and maintain porosity in the soil. The same type of burner is used to disinfect wastewater in this case sulfur dioxide is used instead of chlorine. [Pg.145]

But to retain the proper perspective here, let s remember that chlorination is probably the most important public health measure in the history of the world. Chlorine was first used to disinfect water at Maidstone, England, in 1897, during an outbreak of typhoid fever. People had known about the pale green gas since 1774, when the German scientist Scheele generated it by treating salt (sodium chloride) with sulfuric acid and man-... [Pg.58]

Chlorate. Potassium chlorate, [CAS 3811-04-9], chlorate of potash, KCIO, white solid, soluble, mp about 350°C, powerful oxidizing agent, and consequently a fire hazard with dry organic materials, such as clothes, and with sulfur upon heating oxygen is liberated and the residue is potassium chloride formed by electrolysis of potassium chloride solution under proper conditions, Used (l)m matches, (2) in pyrotechnics, (3) as disinfectant, (4) as a source of oxygen upon heating, (Hazardous Use of potassium perchlorate is recommended instead )... [Pg.1361]


See other pages where Sulfur disinfectant is mentioned: [Pg.239]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.489]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.559]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.418]    [Pg.770]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.575]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1297 , Pg.1301 ]




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