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Watkins Odor Zap!
Odors can be controlled in two fundamentally different ways: ý Masking - Most of us are familiar with the masking concept. A fresh-smelling liquid is sprayed to mask the unpleasant odor. The unpleasant odor remains in the background, and if released from a persistent source, will require repeated masking applications. ... and ... þ Destructive Elimination - Destructive elimination is a process which actually destroys the odor-producing chemicals, and can also be used to eliminate a persistent source. In this process, an odor-eliminating chemical is applied to the source of the odor. It reacts chemically through oxidation to convert the odiferous chemical to a new compound which has no odor—actually destroying it. Further, when odor-eliminating chemicals are sprayed on a persistent source such as waste matter, rotting vegetation, mildew, etc., not only do they destroy the immediate odor, but they speed up the destruction of the persistent source by oxidizing it to non-volatile (and therefore non-odorous) materials. Although odor-destruction chemicals cannot be combined with pleasant-smelling perfumes (their action will destroy the perfume), they do have a characteristic “fresh” smell. This smell is much like the air after a thunderstorm. In fact, traces of the chemical responsible for “thunderstorm freshness” are present in this odor-destruction formulation. Odor Zap is a safe and powerful odor-destruction formulation for use in any area where odors occur.
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