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  2. Dry ice bomb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dry_ice_bomb

    Dry ice bombs are commonly made from a container such as a plastic bottle, water and dry ice. The bottle is partly filled with water. Chunks of dry ice are added and the container is closed tightly. As the solid carbon dioxide warms, it sublimates to gas and the pressure in the bottle increases. Bombs typically rupture within 30 seconds to half ...

  3. So, Are All Your Water Bottles Made Out of Lead? - AOL

    www.aol.com/water-bottles-made-lead-212000739.html

    Lead Free Mama, LLC, tested the 32 ounce Hydroflask in 2017 and deemed it lead free, and more recently added the bottle to a 2023 round up of favorite lead-free water bottles. Owala. Owala took to ...

  4. Nongfu Spring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nongfu_Spring

    The company was established on September 26, 1996. [4] It launched its first packaged drinking water product in 1997 with water sourced from Zhejiang Thousand-Island Lake and became the joint stock company Nongfu Spring Co., Ltd in 2001. [5] As reported by Reuters, Nongfu Spring filed an initial public offering [6] with the Hong Kong Stock ...

  5. This is why you should never refill your plastic water bottle

    www.aol.com/2019-07-30-this-is-why-you-should...

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  6. List of bottled water brands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bottled_water_brands

    This is a list of bottled water brands. Bottled water is drinking water (e.g., well water, distilled water, mineral water, or spring water) packaged in plastic, cartons, aluminum, or glass water bottles. Bottled water may be carbonated or not. Sizes range from small single serving bottles to large carboys for water coolers. The environmental ...

  7. High-test peroxide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-test_peroxide

    Hydrogen peroxide works best as a propellant in extremely high concentrations (roughly over 70%). Although any concentration of peroxide will generate some hot gas (oxygen plus some steam), at concentrations above approximately 67%, the heat of decomposing hydrogen peroxide becomes large enough to completely vaporize all the liquid at standard pressure.

  8. This is why you should never refill your plastic water bottle

    www.aol.com/article/lifestyle/2019/07/30/this-is...

    We’re all guilty of refilling our plastic water bottles—but the consequences can be seriously harmful to your health.

  9. The battle over bottled water moves to YouTube - AOL

    www.aol.com/2010/08/06/bottled-water...

    Americans drink 500 million bottles of water. The battle over whether bottled water is a blight on the environment or an upstanding consumer choice has moved to YouTube, where the two sides are ...