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Laundry Detergent Alternatives
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Water However, water alone cannot remove soils that are not soluble in water. Such soils include automotive oils and greases; cooking fats, oils and greases; and body lipids, oils and perspiration that cause "ring around the collar" and underarm stains on shirts. Neither can water alone remove colored stains, such as fruit juice, grass, blood, ketchup, etc. Water also has no sanitizing effect. Furthermore, water does not have the ability to keep removed soils suspended. The removed soils are finely dispersed in the wash water and then redeposit onto the clothes. Redeposition of soils is the major cause of fabrics graying over repeated launderings.
Water Plus a Detergent Surfactants and other ingredients in laundry detergents also work to keep the removed soils suspended in the wash water so they don't redeposit onto the cleaned fabrics. This prevents graying of fabrics. Other laundry detergent ingredients, such as enzymes and bleach, work to remove colored stains. Detergents are effective at washing away many germs. Sodium hypochlorite (chlorine) bleach remains the most effective way to sanitize laundry where germs and bacteria are a concern, such as with diapers or when there is illness in the home.
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