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Encyclopedia > Bubble bath

The term has two distinct meanings, depending on whether the bubbles are in, or on top of, the bath water. Taking bubble baths will make your day so much better and will also make you smarter, especially if throw in 2 or more yellow rubber duckies.

Contents

Bubbles in the water

This meaning of "bubble bath" is more commonly used by non-native users of English.


Bubbles in the water can be produced either by aerating it mechanically (in some cases using jets that also move the water) using equipment installed permanently or temporarily in a bathtub, hot tub, or pool, or by producing gas in the water in a bathtub through the use of effervescent solids. The latter can come as small pellets known as bath fizzies or as a bolus known as a bath bomb, and they produce carbon dioxide by reaction of a bicarbonate or carbonate with an organic acid. For television series episodes entitled Hot Tub, see Hot Tub (Drawn Together episode) or The Hot Tub (Seinfeld episode). ... A bath bomb, sometimes called a bath fizzie is a scented ball which, when placed in a full bathtub, bubbles and fizzes, scenting and colouring the bath water. ...


Bubbles on top of the water

Bubbles on top of the water, less ambiguously known as a foam bath (see photo), can be obtained by adding a product containing foaming surfactants to water and temporarily aerating it by agitation (often merely by the fall of water from a faucet). The practice is popular for personal bathing because the foam insulates the bath water, keeping it warm for longer, and (as a lime soap dispersant) prevents or reduces deposits on the bath tub at and below the water level (called "bathtub ring" and soap scum, respectively) produced by soap and hard water. It can also keep the body of the bather from being visible, preserving modesty while giving the appearance that a performer who is actually clothed is tub-bathing normally. Children find foam baths particularly amusing, so they are an inducement to get them into the bathtub. Image File history File linksMetadata No higher resolution available. ... Image File history File linksMetadata No higher resolution available. ... Surfactants, also known as wetting agents, lower the surface tension of a liquid, allowing easier spreading. ... Thermal insulation on the Huygens probe The term thermal insulation can refer to materials used to reduce the rate of heat transfer, or the methods and processes used to reduce heat transfer. ... This article is about the computer protocol. ... Hard water is water that has a high mineral content (water with a low mineral content is known as soft water). ... This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...


Surfactant preparations for this purpose are themselves called "bath foam", "foaming bath", or "bubble bath", and frequently contain ingredients for additional purposes common to bath additives. Used at much higher concentration (for instance on a waschloth), such preparations (especially in liquid form) may also be used to wash skin or hair, so they are sometimes marketed for combined purposes; in a few cases, mild household detergents for hand washing of articles have also been labeled for such purposes, or for preventing soap scum on the bathtub (with or without foaming).


Both types combined

It is possible for a single bath to have bubbles in both places, but the combination is less popular because of the possibility of runaway foaming, the relatively small volume of gas production by effervescent products (and the gas's depletion by the agitation to foam the bath), and the fact that mechanically aerated baths are often public or otherwise shared by adults.


History

Effervescent bath products came into use as effervescent bath salts early in the 20th Century; the bath bomb became a popular form late in that century. The earliest foam baths were foamed with soap, which practice came about shortly after soap flakes were marketed. Saponins were also used to foam machine-aerated baths. Foam baths became more popular with later surfactants, and indeed the earliest recorded public use of an alkyl sulfate surfactant was as bath foam in the original 1936 production of the play The Women. Foam baths became standard practice for bathing children after the mass marketing of products so positioned during the 1960s and thereabouts; the dubious claim had been made that their normal use (diluted in a tubful of water) would clean skin well enough without soap or rubbing. The name bath salts is applied to a range of soluble solid products designed to be added to a bath, either to improve cleaning, provide a medical improvement, or to improve the experience of bathing. ... A bath bomb, sometimes called a bath fizzie is a scented ball which, when placed in a full bathtub, bubbles and fizzes, scenting and colouring the bath water. ... This article is about the computer protocol. ... Saponins are a class of glucosides found in plants. ... Surfactants, also known as wetting agents, lower the surface tension of a liquid, allowing easier spreading. ... Original film poster The Women is a comedy of manners by Clare Boothe Luce. ...


Machine-aerated baths originated in the early 20th Century for therapeutic use, becoming more widely used with the introduction of the Jacuzzi. Trends merged when the hot tub, which originally had still water, with its increasing popularity became more commonly a communal whirlpool bath. By the late 20th Century jetted bathtubs had become popular for home installation. Jacuzzi is a company producing whirlpool bathtubs and spas. ... For television series episodes entitled Hot Tub, see Hot Tub (Drawn Together episode) or The Hot Tub (Seinfeld episode). ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Is your bubble bath safe? | the Daily Mail (2220 words)
Bubble baths, which are highly fragranced, have the greatest potential to cause skin irritation, allergic skin reactions and headaches.
Both bubble baths and shower gels have the potential to penetrate the skin and lungs.
Your bubble bath is likely to contain potentially irritating detergents like sodium laureth sulphate and cocami-dopropyl betaine (the latter is also a penetration enhancer, allowing other chemicals to be more easily absorbed); preservatives such as tetrasodium EDTA, a potential irritant; and methylchloroisothiazolinone (both potential mutagens — substances that speed up gene mutation).
Make Bath Salts, Bath Bombs and Bubble Bath Recipes (928 words)
Bath Salts are an easily prepared alternative to bath herbs, and are to be preferred to the mixtures now on the market; most of these chemical-ridden formulas are almost guaranteed to irritate your skin.
Bath salts are used for many different purposes, and they make great gifts too.
For bath salts place in a deep wide rimmed container, dont use a small bottle neck as the salts may harden, making it almost impossible to get out.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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