Saturday, October 31, 2009

Is the alcohol in beer and wine the same as the alcohol that is used as a disinfectant and antiseptic?


Answer:
No. Rubbing alcohol is isopropyl alcohol, drinking is ethanol. They have highly different chemistries, uses and ways of being made. They are both types of alcohol (hydroxyl group bound to a carbon atom in an alkyl group), but they don't have much in common besides both being part of the same subset of chemicals.
No.卢驴卢
No it can't well it's my opinion.
do not try that, it has some serious health hazard
disinfectants and antiseptics more than beer, and most wines.
No, if you look on the labels, they will be different. the antiseptic will say alcohol...(something that starts with a d)
no there are many differnt levels of alcohol, we drink ethal alcohol, but usually in disenfectants and stuff its isoproply, it just has to do with the chemical composition, just only drink ethal, others could cause sever health problems
ANTISEPTIC:A flavoured, usually antiseptic solution used for cleaning the mouth and freshening the breath..DISINFECTANT:An agent, such as heat, radiation, or a chemical, that destroys, neutralises, or inhibits the growth of disease-carrying microorganisms. Serving to disinfect.
so my answer is no they r not same
first you should differentiate the beer%26wine and alcohol. In beer and wine, less amonut (30-45%) of alcohol is mixed to make a kick.
The alcohol in beer and wine is not same as the alcohol, which is commonly known as absolute alcohol (90-100% alcohol).
This is Jimmy Ebasco, the one who initiallly asked this question. Some of your answers sounds as though if i'm asking "is it safe to drink antiseptic alcohol or if it's safe to mix it with drinking alcohol?" Well, you stupid morons, I'M NOT! I'm SIMPLY asking if the two are the same...that's it! How is that so difficult to understand? Unless you people don't know how to read!

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