BathandSoaps.co.uk

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BathandSoaps.co.uk

BathandSoaps.co.uk

@bathandsoaps

insta: @bathandsoaps

Inscrit le Kasım 2018
73 Abonnements32 Abonnés
BathandSoaps.co.uk
BathandSoaps.co.uk@bathandsoaps·
Site down temporarily will be back soon and dispatching orders ASAP
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Lauren Ann
Lauren Ann@laurenannbeauty·
Bubble Trouble UK Social Media 💜 Instagram.com/bubbletroubleuk Twitter.com/bubbletroubleuk I’ll be doing sneak peeks of the bath bombs as well as competitions where you can guess the scent/name to win a bath bomb so if you’d like to join in then follow me on these accounts 🥰
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Lauren Ann
Lauren Ann@laurenannbeauty·
Made some doughnuts today with the mould that @xtaliaahmed kindly gifted me! 🥰😍
Lauren Ann tweet media
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Lauren Ann
Lauren Ann@laurenannbeauty·
I hope everyone has a lovely weekend! ⭐️
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Beth Norton
Beth Norton@beth__norton·
I’d cleaned and hoovered the whole flat, taken the bins and recycling down, done some washing *and* the washing up all while wearing a probiotic face mask before 7.30am this morning when I was sat at my desk ready to start work. Go me
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BathandSoaps.co.uk retweeté
Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
25/25 If the virus is on your hands you can pass it on by shaking someone’s else hand. Kisses, well, that's pretty obvious…It comes without saying that if someone sneezes right in your face you are kind of stuffed. Part 2 about soap coming next (25 post limit reached)!
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
24/25 And now the virus is dangerously close to the airways and the mucus type membranes in and around your mouth and eyes. So the virus can get in…and voila! You are infected (that is, unless your immune system kills the virus).
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
23/25 So when you touch say a steel surface with a virus particle on it, it will stick to your skin and hence get transferred onto your hands. But you are not (yet) infected. If you touch your face though, the virus can get transferred from your hands and on to your face.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
22/25 The skin is an ideal surface for a virus! It is “organic” and the proteins and fatty acids in the dead cells on the surface interact with the virus through both hydrogen bonds and the “fat-like” hydrophilic interactions.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
21/25 For how long does the virus stay active? It depends. The SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus is thought to stay active on favourable surfaces for hours, possibly a day. Moisture (“dissolves”), sun light (UV light) and heat (molecular motions) all make the virus less stable.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
20/25 In contrast steel, porcelain or teflon do not form a lot of hydrogen bond with the virus. So the virus is not strongly bound to these surfaces. The virus is quite stable on these surface whereas it doesn’t stay active for as long on say fabric or wood.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
19/25 So why are surfaces different? The virus is held together by a combination of hydrogen bonds (like those in water) and what we call hydrophilic or “fat-like” interactions. The surface of fibres or wood for instance can form a lot of hydrogen bonds with the virus.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
18/25 Contrast this with steel, porcelain and at least some plastics, e.g. teflon. The surface structure also matter – the flatter the surface the less the virus will “stick” to the surface. Rougher surfaces can actually pull the virus apart.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
17/25 Now it is time to introduce a powerful supramolecular chemistry concept that effectively says: similar molecules appear to interact more strongly with each other than dissimilar ones. Wood, fabric and not to mention skin interact fairly strongly with viruses.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
16/25 These tiny droplets end on surfaces and often dry out quickly. But the viruses are still active! What happens next is all about supramolecular chemistry and how self-assembled nanoparticles (like the viruses) interact with their environment!
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
15/25 When you cough, or especially when you sneeze, tiny droplets from the airways can fly up to 10 meters (30 ft)! The larger ones are thought to be main coronavirus carriers and they can go at least 2 m (7 ft). Thus – cover your coughs & sneezes people!
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
14/25 All those new viruses eventually overwhelm the cell and it dies/explodes releasing viruses which then go on to infect more cells. In the lungs, some of these viruses end up in the airways and the mucous membranes surrounding these.
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Palli Thordarson
Palli Thordarson@PalliThordarson·
13/25 These new RNA and protein molecules, self-assemble with lipids (usually readily present in the cell) to form new copies of the virus. That is, the virus does not photocopy itself, it makes copies of the building blocks which then self-assemble into new viruses!
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