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What's the scientific reason it can do this?

2007-02-03 12:36:03 · 7 answers · asked by kitbasher 1 in Home & Garden Cleaning & Laundry

7 answers

the sodium bicarbonate doesn't destroy the odours, it absorbs them, like a sponge absorbing water the sodium bicarb attracts water molecules to it, and with the water molecules (which attatch to almost everything) the odours

2007-02-03 13:01:22 · answer #1 · answered by MimC 4 · 1 0

Personally, I dont' think baking soda works all that well. The moisture in the air tends to cake up the powder and limits the surface area in which to absorb odors.
I have a better solution that i use myself for really difficult fridge odors. It is a product called FRIDGE IT odor absorbers. It is a littler purple cube with an activated carbon filter inside that is really great. It works so much better than baking soda and all those sprays. You probably should place one in your freezer and your refrigerator since circulate together. The carbon filter in this product literally eliminates the odors and works for a long time. I use this product everywhere including my fridge and freezer and also under sinks, near trash and have friends that use it on cat litter box and also diaper pails - it's that good. I really recommend it and it's not expensive. You can buy it in kitchen gadget sections in stores like walmart and linens and things. I also think camping world sells it. Definitely worth trying. It's the best product for actually eliminating odors

2007-02-04 07:29:25 · answer #2 · answered by JenJ 4 · 0 0

I used it one time on a wooden floor. The window was left open by accident. There was linoleum on the floor. It rained and the water got underneath. We had to strip the floor. The smell was outrageous. We sprinkled baking soda all over the floor and left it for 3 days. Then we swept it up and vaccuumed it. There wasn't any smell at all. We laid a rug down and turned it into a nursery it worked so well.
Scientifically I don't know. But baking soda is sodium or salt based. Probably the bleaching power of the salt is what did it. Salt is a great cleaner.

2007-02-03 12:50:02 · answer #3 · answered by Me2 5 · 0 0

Baking powder is a mixture of baking soda and a dry acid. once you upload moisture, both react. (they do no longer react even as dry.) Wetting some baking powder may be such as blending making soda with lemon. Lemon juice is an acid. Do human beings fragrance the body scent, or is it in common terms you? you possibly may favor to be particular a psychiatrist, no longer an endocrinologist.

2016-11-24 23:17:49 · answer #4 · answered by nordland 4 · 0 0

Baking soda only neutralizes odors if they're acidic or basic compounds, like spoiled milk or ammonia for example.

2007-02-03 12:55:31 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

For Gawd sake. Don't analyze it, just do it........

2007-02-03 12:57:42 · answer #6 · answered by buzzwaltz 4 · 1 0

i don't know...but it works in my fridge!

2007-02-03 12:40:32 · answer #7 · answered by Qu'est ce que tu penses? 6 · 0 0

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