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The Science of Handwashing: How Soap Kills the Coronavirus and Other Germs

Publication Number: P3869
View as PDF: P3869.pdf

It may seem simple, but the act of handwashing is lethal to viruses like the coronavirus. Let’s take a closer look at a dollop of soap!

  1. A soap molecule has a head and tail. The head is hydrophilic (attracted to water), and the tail is hydrophobic (repelled by water).
  2. When soap molecules dissolve in water, they arrange themselves into spherical clusters called micelles, with the hydrophilic heads on the outside and the hydrophobic tails on the inside.
  3. The coronavirus has a core of genetic material surrounded by an outer double fatty layer with spike proteins. This fatty layer repels water and protects the virus.
  4. The soap molecule’s hydrophobic tail attaches to the virus’s fatty covering
  5. ... and pulls the virus apart, killing and destroying it.
  6. And when you add more water, it washes away.

BUT! For all of this to happen, it takes at least 20 seconds!

That is why washing your hands is so effective against the coronavirus!

The power to slow the spread of COVID-19 is literally in your hands.


This infographic was adapted from NewYork-Presbyterian’s Health Matters article, “How Soap Suds Kill the Coronavirus.” To read this article, visit: https://healthmatters.nyp.org/how-does-handwashing-with-soap-kill-the-coronavirus/

This work was, in part, funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Agreement OT2HL158287. The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the official policies, either expressed or implied, of the NIH.

Publication 3869 (02-23)

Department: Food Science, Nutrition and Health Promotion
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