บอแรกซ์ บริสุทธิ์ ขนาด 500 กรัม
บอแร็กซ์ บริสุทธิ์ นำเข้าจาก USA ของบริษัท 20 MULE TEAM BORAX ขนาด 500 กรัม
น้ำประสานทอง หรือ บอแรกซ์ เป็นสารประกอบที่สำคัญของโบรอน ชื่อทางเคมี โซเดียมโบเรท ชื่อสามัญ น้ำประสานทอง หรือผงเนื้อกรอบ หรือเพ่งแซ เมื่อถ้าอยู่ในรูปผลึกบริสุทธิ์จะไม่มีสี ถ้านำไปเผาต่อจนไม่มีน้ำอยู่ในโมเลกุลจะเรียกน้ำประสานทองสะตุ เป็นผงมีสีขาว ละลายน้ำได้ง่าย
บอแรกซ์ เป็นสารประกอบที่สำคัญของโบรอน ชื่อทางเคมี โซเดียมโบเรท ชื่อสามัญ น้ำประสานทอง หรือผงเนื้อกรอบ หรือเพ่งแซ เมื่อถ้าอยู่ในรูปผลึกบริสุทธิ์จะไม่มีสี ถ้านำไปเผาต่อจนไม่มีน้ำอยู่ในโมเลกุลจะเรียกน้ำประสานทองสะตุ เป็นผงมีสีขาว ละลายน้ำได้ง่าย
Borax also known as sodium borate sodium tetraborate or disodium tetraborate is an important boron compound a mineral and a salt of boric acid. Powdered borax is white consisting of soft colorless crystals that dissolve in water. A number of closely related minerals or chemical compounds that differ in their crystal water content are referred to as borax and the word is usually used to refer to the octahydrate. Commercially sold borax is partially dehydrated.
Borax is a component of many detergents cosmetics and enamel glazes. It is used to make buffer solutions in biochemistry as a fire retardant as an anti-fungal compound in the manufacture of fiberglass as a flux in metallurgy neutron-capture shields for radioactive sources a texturing agent in cooking as a cross-linking agent in slime as an alkali in photographic developers as a precursor for other boron compounds and along with its inverse boric acid is useful as an insecticide.
Borax was first discovered in dry lake beds in Tibet and was imported via the Silk Road to the Arabian Peninsula in the 8th century AD. Borax first came into common use in the late 19th century when Francis Marion Smiths Pacific Coast Borax Company began to market and popularize a large variety of applications under the 20 Mule Team Borax trademark named for the method by which borax was originally hauled out of the California and Nevada deserts.
Natural sources
Borax occurs naturally in evaporite deposits produced by the repeated evaporation of seasonal lakes. The most commercially important deposits are found in: Turkey; Boron California; and Searles Lake California. Also borax has been found at many other locations in the Southwestern United States the Atacama desert in Chile newly discovered deposits in Bolivia and in Tibet and Romania.
Household products
Borax is used in various household laundry and cleaning products including the 20 Mule Team Borax laundry booster Boraxo powdered hand soap and some tooth bleaching formulas.
Food additive
Borax given the E number E285 is used as a food additive but is banned in some countries such as the United States China and Thailand. As a consequence certain foods such as caviar produced for sale in the United States contain higher levels of salt to assist preservation. In addition to its use as a preservative borax imparts a firm rubbery texture to food. In China borax has been found in foods including wheat and rice noodles named; lamian shahe fen kway teow and chee cheong fun. In Indonesia it is a common but forbidden additive to such foods as noodles bakso (meatballs) and steamed rice. The countrys Directorate of Consumer Protection warns of the risk of liver cancer with high consumption over a period of five to ten years.
Other uses
Medicinal
- Anti-fungal foot soak
- Treatment for thrush in horses hoofs
- Is found in some commercial vitamin supplements
Other
- Ingredient in enamel glazes
- Component of glass pottery and ceramics
- Used as an additive in ceramic slips and glazes to improve fit on wet greenware and bisque
- Fire retardant
- Anti-fungal compound for cellulose insulation
- Moth proofing 10% solution for wool
- Pulverized for the prevention of stubborn pests (e.g. German cockroaches) in closets pipe and cable inlets wall panelling gaps and inaccessible locations where ordinary pesticides are undesirable
- Precursor for sodium perborate monohydrate that is used in detergents as well as for boric acid and other borates
- Tackifier ingredient in casein starch and dextrin based adhesives
- Precursor for boric acid a tackifier ingredient in polyvinyl acetate polyvinyl alcohol based adhesives
- Fluoride detoxification
- To make indelible ink for dip pens by dissolving shellac into heated borax
- Curing agent for snake skins
- Curing agent for salmon eggs for use in sport fishing for salmon
- Swimming pool buffering agent to control pH
- Neutron absorber used in nuclear reactors and spent fuel pools to control reactivity and to shut down a nuclear chain reaction
- As a micronutrient fertilizer to correct boron-deficient soils.
- Preservative in taxidermy
- To color fires with a green tint
- Was traditionally used to coat dry-cured meats such as hams to improve the appearance and discourage flies.
- For stopping car radiator and engine block leaks