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Discover LudwigThe phrase "strong oxidant" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English
It refers to a substance that is highly reactive and causes oxidation in other substances. Example: "The chemist used a strong oxidant to test the metal's resistance to rust."
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It is a strong oxidant, and it oxidizes the alcohol as far as possible without breaking carbon-carbon bonds.
The hydroxyl radical is a strong oxidant capable of oxidizing various organic compounds.
The graphite nano-sheets were oxidized by a strong oxidant.
The second method involves the short time oxidation treatment with a strong oxidant (ammonium persulfate), where the hydrophilicity of the membrane is greatly increased.
The more noteworthy result in the analysis of G oxidation products was the strong oxidant dependence of the product spectra.
MCNTs were chosen as a precursor, for they resemble, in structure, several graphene layers rolled into a tube; therefore, using a strong oxidant, one can 'break' nanotubes to form oxidized graphene nanostrips [12].
Superoxide interacts with nitric oxide (NO) to form peroxynitrite, a strong oxidant that attacks various biomolecules and causes functional defects in cells and tissues [8].
O2-, if not scavenged by SOD, may react with nitric oxide radical (NO) to form the strong oxidant peroxynitrite (ONOO-) [ 39].
Indeed, although it has a lower oxidizing potential than HO, CO3− is a strong oxidant.
Moreover, it is both a strong oxidant and peroxidant and, if formed, may chemically attack (oxidize) a nearby molecule, often the same molecule that sensitized the molecular oxygen.
Iodide is not pesticide, but is oxidized, by vegetable peroxidase, to iodine, which is a strong oxidant, it is able to kill bacteria, fungi and protozoa.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com