Difference between revisions of "Repellent"
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== Description == | == Description == | ||
− | A substance that repels or averts another. Hydrophobic materials, such as oils, fats, rubber, wax, silicone, and Teflon®, are water-repellent. Some chemicals, because of their smell or taste, repel animals and insects. For example, mosquitos and ticks are repelled by citronella, dimethyl phthalate, DEET and 2-ethyl hexanediol-1,3. Rodents are repelled by actidione, thiuram disulfide and hexachlorophene. | + | A substance that repels or averts another. Hydrophobic materials, such as [[Oil|oils]], [[Fat|fats]], [[rubber]], [[wax]], [[silicone]], and [[Teflon|Teflon®]], are water-repellent. Some chemicals, because of their smell or taste, repel animals and insects. For example, mosquitos and ticks are repelled by [[Citronella oil|citronella]], dimethyl phthalate, [[Deet|DEET]] and 2-ethyl hexanediol-1,3. Rodents are repelled by actidione, thiuram disulfide and [[hexachlorophene]]. |
− | == | + | ==Resources and Citations== |
* Richard S. Lewis, ''Hawley's Condensed Chemical Dictionary'', Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 10th ed., 1993 | * Richard S. Lewis, ''Hawley's Condensed Chemical Dictionary'', Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 10th ed., 1993 |
Revision as of 12:52, 20 August 2022
Description
A substance that repels or averts another. Hydrophobic materials, such as oils, fats, Rubber, Wax, Silicone, and Teflon®, are water-repellent. Some chemicals, because of their smell or taste, repel animals and insects. For example, mosquitos and ticks are repelled by citronella, dimethyl phthalate, DEET and 2-ethyl hexanediol-1,3. Rodents are repelled by actidione, thiuram disulfide and Hexachlorophene.
Resources and Citations
- Richard S. Lewis, Hawley's Condensed Chemical Dictionary, Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York, 10th ed., 1993