Cleaning Chemical Safety: Disinfecting w/ Bleach & Hydrogen Peroxide with Tara Kahan (CIE 8 of 31)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
  • Tara Kahan (research-groups.usask.ca/kaha...) is an Environmental Analytical Chemist at University of Saskatchewan, and a friend of ours who served on our science advisory board for the 'Home Diagnosis' TV series (HomeDiagnosis.tv).
    Here she presents her findings of a few field and lab experiments into air quality impacts of surface cleaners. Lots to unpack, lots of research still to be done.
    Watch this entire 31-part series on the Chemistry of Indoor Environments:
    • Indoor Chemistry: PhD ...
    Learn WAY more by subscribing here, and see this data woven into stories at: homediagnosis.tv/
    Read papers and see the raw research at: indoorchem.org/
    Join our Patreon team and become part of a year-round conference on applied building science: / homediagnosistv
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 10

  • @tealkerberus748
    @tealkerberus748 Před 20 dny +2

    Realising that this is #8/31 I go look for #1 in the series and watch from there.

  • @ryansoo4000
    @ryansoo4000 Před 19 dny +1

    Hi Corbett. I was watching a video on the 2024 Solar Decathlon competition and one of the projects used a Hydraloop H300 which disinfects grey water from washing machines, showers and baths. Apparently it can disinfect up to 80 gallons a day and the cleaned water can be sent back to the washing machine or the toilets. There are no filters to clean, no chemicals to add and is self-cleaning. Look under the FAQ section on their website for more info. Have you heard of this product before, or anything like it?

  • @dustinabc
    @dustinabc Před 20 dny +2

    I've watched a majority of your videos the last few years, but definitely not all of them. Have you ever researched the effect of various house plants? I've seen several claims that certain places can help clean the air.

    • @sp1200M3D
      @sp1200M3D Před 17 dny

      Yes and no. You have to be careful with the water under the pot, and also with old soil. Molds will gravitate to these areas, thus affecting indoor air quality. Stachybotrys (toxic mold) has been found many times under potted houseplants. It’s a hydrophilic mold, meaning it loves constant moisture. And dryer molds like Cladosporium and Aspergillus/Penicilium can gravitate to the above soil. Some IEP’s say no to houseplants, I disagree. I say just be smart by keeping the area clean, and changing out the soil after a while. And maybe not overdoing it with multiple plants. Absolutely having too many plants can change the indoor normal fungal ecology. Not to mention the newspaper we use under pots already has dormant mold spores in it, because it is recycled paper. Hence why drywall grows mold so quickly. Just my 2 cents.

  • @weiss27md
    @weiss27md Před 16 dny

    Can y'all make this into a podcast?

  • @tealkerberus748
    @tealkerberus748 Před 20 dny +2

    When I scroll down to read the comments before watching the vid and I'm too early.. First?

  • @nickk05281982
    @nickk05281982 Před 19 dny

    Except the worse bacteria and viruses will survey and repopulate within seconds