Results 211 to 220 of about 158,894 (263)
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DETERGENT COMPOSITIONS

1994
A built particulate detergent composition for fabric washing, containing not more than 10 wt.% of water-insoluble builder and not more than 10 wt.% of water, contains a high level (40-90 wt.%) of a nonionic surfactant component consisting wholly or predominantly of a nonionic surfactant solid at ambient temperature, for example, alkylpolyglycoside or ...
UNILEVER PLC, UNILEVER NV
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Detergent Toxicity

Pediatrics, 1972
Products of the soap and detergent industry find their way into every home in America. Fifteen percent of all inquiries to Poison Control Centers involve the ingestion of household detergents and polishing agents by children under 5 years of age. In 1970, these amounted to 10,810 reports, of which one-third involved soap, detergents, and cleaners.
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Arsenic in Detergents

Nature, 1958
DURING an investigation of the arsenic content of human hair it was discovered fortuitously that a well-known household detergent contained an appreciable proportion of arsenic. This unexpected finding arose in the following way. Since 1954 we have been studying the use of activation analysis for the estimation of arsenic in samples of hair, skin and ...
J M, LENIHAN, H, SMITH, J G, CHALMERS
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Detergent proteases

Current Opinion in Biotechnology, 2004
Over the past 20 years, the development of subtilisins as typical detergent proteases has employed all the tools of enzyme technology, resulting in a constant flow of new and improved enzymes. The number of molecules identified and characterized, however, is in clear opposition to the number of molecules that are entering the market.
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The analysis of detergents

Talanta, 1975
A review is made of the analysis of detergents, covering the determination of all classes of component materials.
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The Detergent Dilemma

Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal, 1965
(1965). The Detergent Dilemma. Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal: Vol. 11, No. 5, pp. 695-700.
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Ototoxicity of Detergents

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1982
To the Editor .—I read with interest the article entitled "The Ototoxicity of Topically Applied Povidone-Iodine Preparations," by Morizono and Sikora that was published in the AprilArchives(1982;108:210-213). I am questioning some of the conclusions of the authors. Unfortunately, they do not totally describe the scrub being tested.
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Detergents and detergency.

Journal of sterile services management, 1985
A simple definition of a "clean" surface is one which is "free from any residual film or soil which is visible or can be felt by touch", ie it should not contaminate food or other consumable items with odour, microbial spoilage or chemical residue.
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Detergents: an overview.

Methods in enzymology, 2009
Detergents are used in molecular biology laboratories every day. They are present in cell lysis buffers (e.g., in kits for plasmid isolation), in electrophoresis and blotting buffers, and, most importantly, they are used for cleaning laboratory glassware and the hands of the laboratory staff.
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Detergents and the Skin

British Journal of Dermatology, 1969
Niels Hjorth, D. S. Wilkinson
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