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Merck

88597

Hydrogen peroxide solution

3%, suitable for microbiology

Synonym(s):

Catalase Test, Catalase Test, H2O2

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About This Item

Empirical Formula (Hill Notation):
H2O2
CAS Number:
Molecular Weight:
34.01
UNSPSC Code:
41171621
NACRES:
NA.85
PubChem Substance ID:
MDL number:
Beilstein/REAXYS Number:
3587191

Product Name

Hydrogen peroxide solution, 3%, suitable for microbiology

InChI

1S/H2O2/c1-2/h1-2H

SMILES string

OO

InChI key

MHAJPDPJQMAIIY-UHFFFAOYSA-N

agency

according to GB 4789.30-2016
according to ISO 10272-1:2017
according to ISO 10272-2:2017
according to ISO 11290-1:2017
according to ISO 11290-2:2017

vapor pressure

23.3 mmHg ( 30 °C)

assay

2.8-3.2% (redox titration)

form

solution

shelf life

limited shelf life, expiry date on the label

storage condition

protect from light

technique(s)

microbe id | specific enzyme detection: suitable

color

colorless

pH

6-8 (25 °C)

mp

0.0 °C

density

1.000 g/cm3

application(s)

clinical testing
environmental
food and beverages
veterinary

microbiology

suitability

Pneumococcus spp.
Staphylococcus spp.
bacteria

Quality Level

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Application

Hydrogen peroxide has several important microbial applications due to its strong oxidizing properties. For example:
  • Disinfectant: Hydrogen peroxide can be used as a disinfectant for surfaces, materials, and equipment in microbiology labs. When applied to surfaces, hydrogen peroxide reacts with organic materials, such as bacteria and fungi, and destroys them through oxidation.
  • Sterilization: Hydrogen peroxide is often used in sterilization procedures in microbiology, especially in the pharmaceutical and medical industries. It effectively kills spores that are resistant to many other types of disinfectants.
  • Microbial detection: Hydrogen peroxide can be used to detect catalase activity in bacteria, making it useful in microbial identification and differentiation. The species of bacteria may be distinguished based on their ability to catalyze the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide.

General description

Hydrogen peroxide is often used in microbiology for its ability to break down into water and oxygen gas. This reaction is catalyzed by the enzyme catalase, which is present in many aerobic and facultatively anaerobic bacteria. A small amount of hydrogen peroxide is added to a bacterial culture to detect the presence or absence of catalase activity in the culture.If catalase is present, it will catalyze the breakdown of the hydrogen peroxide, resulting in the formation of oxygen gas bubbles. This reaction can be visually observed as effervescence in the culture. The absence of bubbles indicates that catalase is not present in the culture.The catalase test is commonly used in microbial identification and differentiation, as different species of bacteria present varying levels of catalase activity. For example, Staphylococcus species exhibit high levels of catalase activity, while Streptococcus species do not. The catalase test is also used to differentiate between aerobic bacteria that produce oxygen as a by-product (which typically exhibit catalase activity) and facultative anaerobic bacteria that utilize oxygen but do not produce it as a by-product (which may or may not exhibit catalase activity).

Storage Class

12 - Non Combustible Liquids

wgk

WGK 1

flash_point_f

Not applicable

flash_point_c

Not applicable

ppe

Faceshields, Gloves, Goggles


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Detection of Intracellular Reduced (Catalytically Active) SHP-1 and Analyses of Catalytically Inactive SHP-1 after Oxidation by Pervanadate or H2O2
Choi S and Love PE
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