What it the ionization equation for Barium? Oxygen? and ChlorineI am trying to help my son with his homeworkSo we need all 4; Aluminum/Barium/Oxygen and ChlorineI know I can count on my Yahoo friends!
There are cleaning products specially designed for wax removalOtherwise, scrape away as much excess wax as possible with dull knife or spoonBlot stains with solvent cleaner such as rubbing alcohol, denatured alcohol, or dry cleaning fluid or your favorite household solvent cleanerSome folks recommend using WD-40Use a white rag and blot from outside stains toward middlePre-treat with heavy-duty liquid laundry detergent and let setWash it in the hottest water appropriate for fabricRepeat if necessaryDo not place laundry in a dryer that smells of solvent because they may be flammable.
1.Freeze and scrape, warm iron to get most of the rest2.Follow both of those methods with WD-40 if the fabric will tolerate itWork the WD-40 into the wax;it will break down the wax so that it will wash the rest of the way out3.Treat the oil-like stain the WD-40 will leave with a de-greaser (Shout or the like or even dishsoap)4.Finally, wash with hot water This method worked on crayons melted into the fabric in the dryerSome of the color did not come out but all the wax did.
The definition of first ionization energy is the energy required to remove 1 mole of electron from 1 mole of gaseous atom to form 1 mole of unipositive gaseous ionAl(g) - Al+(g) + e- Ba(g) - Ba+(g) + e- O(g) - O+(g) + e- Cl(g) - Cl+(g) + e-
stick it in the freezer let it get really hardThen scrape as much as possible off with the bowl of a spoonThen sandwich the spot between newspapers or paper towels and iron using the the approriate settingRepeat until it's all melted into the paperGood luck.
wax comes out in drycleaningI dont know why anyone doesnt even consider drycleaners, the stain removal people.