Is Dry Cleaning Actually Wet? - podcast episode cover

Is Dry Cleaning Actually Wet?

Aug 09, 20173 min
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Episode description

Spoiler Alert: No, dry cleaning isn't dry. Instead, it uses a petroleum solvent in place of water. Learn more about dry cleaning in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from how Stuff Works. Hey, brain Stuff, it's Christian Seger. Have you ever wondered how dry cleaning is actually dry? Well, you're about to know. You're about to know how dry cleaning works a little bit. So dry cleaning, here's the thing. It's not really dry. It's actually using liquids. It just doesn't use water, and that's why they call it dry cleaning, which, yeah, it's pretty stupid, but look, that's just the case. In the old timey days,

dry cleaning used to use a solvent called kerosene. You might light your heater with it in your home, especially if you live in a rural area and you don't have electricity. But people figured out that kerosene is not that great for clothes, especially once we had something called paar chloral ethylene, or perk in dry cleaning vernacular. This is the solvent that's most commonly used today. It's probably highly taught toxic. And there's a lot of dry cleaners

out there that you'll see say they use greener methods. Now, when you see that, they're usually using liquefied carbon dioxide, which is a lot greener than perk, and which is again a highly toxic solvent, but it works. Now. A dry cleaning machine looks a lot like a combination washer dryer that you might see, you know, an industrial sized one,

and it is a finely tuned instrument. What the dry cleaner will do is throw your clothes in there with this perk or whatever solvent it is that they're using, and they heat it to a perfect eighties six degrees fahrenheit. Anything more than that it's just going to destroy your clothes, and anything less than that it might not have the cleaning ability that you wanted to have. And it's going to agitate it and take the perk and filter it

out and reuse it. And then when it's finally done, all of the perk is going to be captured and reused and sequestered before they even to open the door, because you don't want this stuff going into the atmosphere. And then voila. You have a dry cleaned, wet shirt that has been cleaned with industrial solvents, and that is dry cleaning. And yes it's wet still, but at least

it's not water. Check out the brain Stuff channel on YouTube and for more on this and thousands of other topics, visit how stuff works dot com,

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