As the Lincoln Reflecting Pool turned green with algae, officials are now using chemicals to fix it.
Read this before you clean with it.
The race to de-greenify the Reflecting Pool continues, as National Park Service workers were seen dumping bottles of hydrogen peroxide into the pool Tuesday morning. Algae first appeared in the pool ...
Gallon jugs of hydrogen peroxide were dumped into the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. But will that fix the green algae?
President Donald Trump’s more than $14 million Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool renovation was completed just over a week ago ...
Due to its high availability, water is considered the most useful starting material for hydrogen production. Ideally, the conversion of water into hydrogen produces a second useful substance: hydrogen ...
The National Park Service is using hydrogen peroxide and “nanobubbles” to treat algae that’s been growing in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool since the water feature was refilled last week after a ...
Let the bubbles do the work. Between dust, hair, body sprays, hairspray, and moisture from steamy showers, your bathroom floor may not be as clean as you want it to be when you step out of a relaxing ...
Limited access to clean water is a major issue for billions of people in the developing world, where water sources are often contaminated with urban, industrial and agricultural waste. Many ...
Ensuring that water is safe to use and consume can be a real chore, especially for those who live in impoverished areas without access to safe drinking water. Here is where researchers at Stanford ...
Hydrogen peroxide escaped early Friday from a large tank at Lake Mary’s water treatment plant, a high-tech facility designed to mitigate contamination in the city’s drinking water, though fire ...
In its bulk liquid form, whether in a bathtub or an ocean, water is a relatively benign substance with little chemical activity. But down at the scale of tiny droplets, water can turn surprisingly ...