Peroxide in a sentence as a noun

I just know that the stuff used in rocket fuels is more like 98% hydrogen peroxide.

Or you could just use hydrogen peroxide to get the blood stains out of fabric.

It looks like people use peroxide, but just the over-the-counter stuff, and just for highlights.

He wanted to build a bomb from acetone peroxide and detonate it in the subway.

It will slowly crystallize acetone peroxide as the reaction occurs.

I imagine that the hydrogen peroxide wasn't the off-the-shelf stuff seeing as he was intending to make rocket fuel from it.

If all antibacterials were harsh chemicals like hydrogen peroxide that might be true.

I'm just stating my thought that it probably wasn't the same as the bottle of hydrogen peroxide that you have in your medicine cabinet.

Peroxide in a sentence as a verb

I'm amazed that there are people that seem to think this sort of treatment of people for non-crimes like owning acetone and hydrogen peroxide is justified.

I emailed the FDA about it, and they responded:Clindamycin is an antibiotic, whereas benzoyl peroxide is not.

The steam for this was created with hydrogen peroxide and a catalyst; almost like a little miniature rocket engine inside of a larger one.

Like Armadillo had the kind of problems that hobbyists have, like they couldn't get a good enough quality of hydrogen peroxide, and they had problems sourcing tanks and such.

A makeshift incubator wouldn't be that hard to fashion, TSA plates are cheap, gram stain kits are relatively cheap, and you can do a catalase test with hydrogen peroxide.

Given enough time - like a 7 hour flight - you could have sufficient quantities of highly reactive acetone peroxide crystals that would likely go off at the slightest movement even while still in a liquid.

Water electrolysis produces oxygen, which would be catalytically oxidized to peroxide, binding O-, and presumably the H+ is bound somehow as well.

Peroxide definitions

noun

a viscous liquid with strong oxidizing properties; a powerful bleaching agent; also used (in aqueous solutions) as a mild disinfectant and (in strong concentrations) as an oxidant in rocket fuels

noun

an inorganic compound containing the divalent ion -O-O-

verb

bleach with peroxide; "She must peroxide her hair-it looks unnaturally blond"