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Household laundry bleach is used in a mild water solution to sterilize grow rooms and as a soil fungicide.

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Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
bleach (verb)
transitive verb
1.
to remove color or stains from
2.
a) to make whiter or lighter especially by physical or chemical removal of color - bleach clothing the sun had bleached her hair
intransitive verb
b) to remove, make dull, or sanitize as if by removing color - bleaches colonialism of its genocidal legacy H. A. Giroux
1.
to grow white or lose color
2.
of coral to expel symbiotic zooxanthellae exposing a white skeleton
bleach (noun)
1.
the act or process of - bleaching
2.
a preparation used in bleaching
3.
the degree of whiteness obtained by bleaching
Merriam-Webster Online Thesaurus
bleach (verb)
to make white or whiter by removing color
SYNONYMS:
blanch, bleach, blench, decolorize, dull, fade, pale, snow, wash out
RELATED WORDS:
brighten, lighten; dim, mat ( matte matt); etiolate; whitewash; frost, silver
NEAR ANTONYMS:
blacken; blotch, checker, dapple, daub, discolor, fleck, marble, mottle, pattern, polychrome, shade, speck, speckle, splotch, spot, streak, striate, stripe, tarnish, variegate; color, dye, paint, pigment, stain, tincture, tinge, tint; burnish, polish, shine
darken, deepen, embrown
Bleach (Wikipedia)

Bleach is the generic name for any chemical product that is used industrially or domestically to remove color from (i.e. to whiten) fabric or fiber (in a process called bleaching) or to disinfect after cleaning. It often refers specifically to a dilute solution of sodium hypochlorite, also called "liquid bleach".

Clorox brand bleach

Many bleaches have broad-spectrum bactericidal properties, making them useful for disinfecting and sterilizing. Liquid bleach is one of the only compounds capable of fully annihilating DNA, making it commonplace for sanitizing laboratory equipment. They are used in swimming pool sanitation to control bacteria, viruses, and algae and in many places where sterile conditions are required. They are also used in many industrial processes, notably in the bleaching of wood pulp. Bleaches also have other minor uses, like removing mildew, killing weeds, and increasing the longevity of cut flowers.

Bleaches work by reacting with many colored organic compounds, such as natural pigments, and turning them into colorless ones. While most bleaches are oxidizing agents (chemicals that can remove electrons from other molecules), some are reducing agents (that donate electrons).

Chlorine, a powerful oxidizer, is the active agent in many household bleaches. Since pure chlorine is a toxic corrosive gas, these products usually contain hypochlorite, which releases chlorine. "Bleaching powder" usually refers to a formulation containing calcium hypochlorite.[citation needed]

Oxidizing bleaching agents that do not contain chlorine are usually based on peroxides, such as hydrogen peroxide, sodium percarbonate, and sodium perborate. These bleaches are called "non-chlorine bleach", "oxygen bleach", or "color-safe bleach".

Reducing bleaches have niche uses, such as sulfur dioxide, which is used to bleach wool, either as gas or from solutions of sodium dithionite, and sodium borohydride.

Bleaches generally react with many other organic substances besides the intended colored pigments, so they can weaken or damage natural materials like fibers, cloth, and leather, and intentionally applied dyes, such as the indigo of denim. For the same reason, ingestion of the products, breathing of the fumes, or contact with skin or eyes can cause bodily harm and damage health.

Bleach (Wiktionary)

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: blēch, IPA(key): /bliːt͡ʃ/
    • (US) IPA(key): [blit͡ʃ]
    • (UK) IPA(key): [bliːt͡ʃ]
  • Rhymes: -iːtʃ

Etymology 1

From Middle English blechen, from Old English blǣċan (to bleach, whiten), from Proto-West Germanic *blaikijan, from Proto-Germanic *blaikijaną, from Proto-Indo-European *bʰel- (to shine).

Cognate with Dutch bleken

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light burn, color loss, chlorosis, sun bleaching, photobleaching
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