Bob and All: I'm glad to hear about the barrier bottle, as I have been using
them to store my CS. I reasoned that anything that could store h202 would
probably be good for CS. My ppm of cs seems to hold fairly steady in the
bottle. Even to buy them, pour out the h2o2 would be cost effective
(Containers Inc. are quoting cobalt blue bottles for $2.90 EACH).

I have had good success at controlling periodontal disease with very dilute
h2o2 solution (half 3%/half water) used before bed at night as a mouth wash
(not rinsed afterward). However. Cs does a far better job for me. No pink
tooth brush since I started using CS as a rinse a couple of months ago. Good
stuff!

Dean Woodward

-----Original Message-----
From:   Tai-Pan [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent:   Wednesday, June 24, 1998 2:32 PM
To:     [email protected]
Subject:        Re: Use of H2O2 (Hydrogen Peroxide)

Douglas Haack wrote:
>
> I understand that the 32% H2O2 is sprayed onto the flat packaging
> materials used for those small popper drink containers prior to final
> fabrication and filling with liquids.
>
> These appear to be fabricated from heavy card board lined with alu foil
> and this foil is lined with a plastic.
>
> The drink packaging plant people seem to be the users according to my
> enquiries here in Sydney
>
> Douglas Haack
 Hi Douglas and list,
  Thats a very interesting use of H2O2. Hydrogen Peroxide comes in many
concentrations. At 90% it will decompose rapidly on contact with lots of
things ( boom,bang). At 32% it will decompose a little more slowly, not
explosively but still very vigorous. Aluminum and plastics are known to
have oily surfaces and require cleaning. Oil is organic and the H2O2
will clean the surface,decomposing as it does into water and oxygen. The
oxygen vaporizes away and the water is dried off leaveing a clean
surface for placing the plastic layer on the aluminum. They would clean
the plastic surface the same way before folding it into a box for
filling. This is industrial strength and must be handled carefully, it
will quickly eat the skin off of you or eat any organic thing it can. At
3% its very safe ,mild, and non-toxic. Its so mild you can buy it in any
store for 38 cents a bottle.When they say its a mild anti-septic, thats
exactly right, won`t hardly hurt a flea. The 3% concentration will
decompose in a few seconds on contact will organic materials as a
foaming bubbly cleanser. Most people use it to bleach hair because it is
so mild. It is used to loosen dried stuck bandages from wounds because
it is so mild and will not harm the tissue. Because of this usage people
thought it was being used to disinfect the wound,while in reality it was
just to get the dried bandage off. Hydrogen Peroxide is thermally
unstable because its formation is a highly endo-thermic process. In
order to store it ,it must be stabilized with small amounts of a
negative catalyst (stabilizer)such as acetanilide. Heavy metals (copper,
silver) will hasten the decomposition into water and oxygen. Storage is
in special bottles called *barrier* bottles. Go get your Hydrogen
Peroxide from your bathroom and look at the bottle. Its a very dark
brown strange feeling plastic bottle. In this bottle it will keep about
two years (they have dates on them, usually on the cap). It will self
decompose by itself anyway over a few years however hard we want it not
to. By the way ,if you have an empty barrier bottle its a great way to
store your CS. Barrier bottles are not permeable like regular plastic
bottles. They aren`t good from a marketing stand point because they are
so ugly (the bottles that is).
 I`m glad a lot of people are looking into uses for this very useful
compound.:-)
 The government says its ok because its so safe,its so mild,even the
kids can play with it (at 3%).

 Bless you   Bob  Lee
--
oozing on the muggy shore of the gulf coast
  [email protected]


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The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

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To post, address your message to: [email protected]

List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>