Vital Oxide Disinfectant 4x1 Gallon Case
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DetailVital Oxide Disinfectant 4x1 Gallon Case
Product details: Category:Industrial & Scientific,Janitorial & Sanitation Supplies,Cleaning Chemicals This EPA registered product is colorless, odorless and will not harm water-safe fabrics.
Vital Oxide is a fast and effective way to kill virus, bacteria, and mold that cause healthcare associated infections
Use Vital Oxide in shower stalls, under sinks, on kitchen counters, in diaper pails, at schools, in day cares, on sports equipment, in basements - anywhere mold or bacteria can be found
Absolutely no clean up time - No rinse required sanitizer for food contact surfaces
Effective on harsh odors such as tobacco, smoke, pet urine, cooking and sports equipment. Vital Oxide cuts to the source of the odors on a molecular level, instead of masking them with fragrancesVital Oxide is EPA registered hospital disinfectant cleaner, food surface sanitizer, mold killer, and heavy duty odor eliminator. Safe around people and pets, Vital Oxide is has been rated by the EPA as a Category 4, which states - no exposure warnings required on label. Effective on a broad-spectrum of virus, and bacteria, including “super bugs” like MRSA and H1N1, Vital Oxide breaks down to simple salt and produces no harmful by-products. Vital Oxide is NSF certified D2 (No Rinse Required)as a food contact surface sanitizer, and kills 99.999% of bacteria, including E. coli, Salmonella and Listeria in less than 60 seconds. Ready to use, no mixing required, just spray, wipe, or fog right from the bottle. Non-irritating to the skin, and non-corrosive to treated articles. Vital Oxide kills microbes by chemically altering certain amino acids that contain sulfur. The amino acids are important building blocks in the proteins that help to form cell walls. When these proteins are destroyed, the cell wall ruptures and the organism dies. In the chemical reaction, Vital Oxide takes on an electron from the amino acid and reverts back to a chlorite ion. The amino acid gives up an electron, and giving up an electron is what chemists call oxidation.
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