bleaching
Learn about this topic in these articles:
flour processing
- In flour
…(separated from bran and germ), bleached or unbleached, and suitable for any recipe not requiring a special flour; cake flour, refined and bleached, with very fine texture; self-rising flour, refined and bleached, with added leavening and salt; and enriched flour, refined and bleached, with added nutrients.
Read More - In cereal processing: Treatment of flour
Although such improvers and the bleaching agents used to rectify excessive yellowness in flour are permitted in most countries, the processes are not universal. Improvers include bromates, chlorine dioxide (in gaseous form), and azodicarbonamide. The most popular bleacher used is benzoyl peroxide.
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motion-picture film development
- In motion-picture technology: Film
This suggested the possibility of bleaching to take away the silver image, leaving the dye image on the film. The first step was to find a developer and dye couplers that would produce the three dye colours that give a faithful three-colour picture rendering. The second step was to carry…
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paper production
- In papermaking: Bleaching and washing
The use of calcium and sodium hypochlorites to bleach paper stock dates from the beginning of the 19th century. In the early days of sulfite pulp manufacture, a single-stage treatment of pulp at low consistency, using calcium hypochlorite (chlorinated lime), satisfied most requirements.
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refining of fats
- In fat and oil processing: Bleaching
If further colour removal is desired, the fat may be treated with various bleaching agents. Heated oils are treated with fuller’s earth (a natural earthy material that will decolorize oils), activated carbon, or activated clays. Many impurities, including chlorophyll and carotenoid pigments, are adsorbed…
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textile industries
- In textile: Bleaching
Bleaching, a process of whitening fabric by removal of natural colour, such as the tan of linen, is usually carried out by means of chemicals selected according to the chemical composition of the fibre. Chemical bleaching is usually accomplished by oxidation, destroying colour by…
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use in painting restoration
- In art conservation and restoration: Prints and drawings on paper
Prudent use of bleaching, deacidification, and other reagents depend upon myriad circumstances, including the long-term aging characteristics after treatment and the possible consequences of residues left in the paper.
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use of peroxides
- In oxide: Peroxides
…(Na2O2) is used as a bleaching agent. It bleaches by oxidizing coloured compounds to colourless compounds.
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