Steam mop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A steam mop is a mop that uses steam to clean floors and carpets. Unlike a regular mop, which requires cleaning agents such as bleach or detergent, the steam mop uses the heat from the steam to disinfect the floors. A microfibre pad is often placed right underneath the steam jet to trap dirt. Most steam mops have a small water tank, and often provide dry steam.

How a steam mop works

A steam mop works by heating up the water inside the reservoir to temperatures of about 120 degrees Celsius. Many steam mops have one jet of dry steam (but may have as many as 15 jets), moistening a microfiber pad placed underneath. The steam helps soak the pad and dirt is drawn off ground. Unlike regular mops, steam mops do not leave a residue on the floor and often clean through the dirt. The intense heat of the steam can kill about 99 percent of the bacteria and household dust mites. Steam mops can disinfect floors, restore shine, kill dust mites, and remove some stains.

Some of the steam mops feature a two-sided, flip mop head that allows you to clean twice as much floor before changing the mop pad. One pad is soft for use on delicate flooring such as hardwoods and laminates. The other pad has built-in scrubbing strips that make cleaning tough, stuck-on messes easy.

Safety

While steam mops have advantages, the heat from the steam and electricity are safety issues. Steam can burn skin quickly. There have been recalls of steam mops related to burn hazards.[1][2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.