5 responses

  1. Robert Houston
    January 29, 2019

    Mixing bleach and ammonia can be done in controlled environment with excellent ventilation. Together these agents can do an excellent cleaning job.

    Reply

    • Harriett Hamil
      March 15, 2020

      Never!

      Reply

  2. Nat McKeen
    March 2, 2020

    Mr. Robert Houston,
    Mixing bleach and ammonia is how mustard gas is created, very dangerous. I do not recommend mixing these two agents together.

    Reply

  3. Douglas Harder
    August 7, 2020

    A comment on parallelism:

    Ammonia mainly consists of one nitrogen atom and three hydrogen atoms. Bleach is made from water, caustic soda and chlorine. When comparing the disinfectant quality of bleach and ammonia, the former is considered to be a stronger disinfectant than the latter.

    The first two sentences have the order “ammonia” and then “bleach”. In the third sentence, however, it reverses the order: “bleach and ammonia.” When skimming this paragraph, I initially missed that the order had changed, and when it said “the former,” my mind immediately jumped to the first of the two items being discussed: ammonia. Thus, I misread the paragraph, believing that “ammonia is considered to be a stronger disinfectant than bleach.” Fortunately, in your summary, you spelled this out explicitly, so I noticed my error.

    However, I would please ask that the authors consider parallelism when authoring articles. If introducing topics A, B and C, continue to discuss those topics in that order in subsequent discussions.

    If you don’t post this and just fix the parallelism, that’s fine with me…

    Reply

    • Ron
      November 9, 2020

      Yes, I totally agree, very unwise to publish anything without thoroughly and thoughtfully being proof read by an expert! Very good in identifying this possible dreadful outcome!

      Reply

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