Pet Stains
Urine Damage Treatment
Pet urine can cause permanent damage to your floors and fabrics. It can also create an detrimental indoor environment. When urine is first deposited onto a floor or fabric, it has a low pH of about 5 or 6, which is acidic. It’s easier to remove when freshly deposited. Once it dries it turns alkaline, to a pH around 10 to12 which is difficult to remove. The warm acid state of the urine offers condusive breeding ground for bacteria, which begin to immediately flourish. In this original acid state the urine begins to oxidize and react with the carpet to create a stain which becomes permanent if the urine is not removed. Some of this staining can be attributed to the strong ammonia that forms as the urine passes through bacterial and chemical change. If left for days or weeks, depending on the fabric or floor type, it will change the dye structure, therefore causing permanent staining. Even if the soluble deposits are removed, the damage to the dye structure may already be done.
There are two sources of odors associated with urine. The first comes from bacteria that grow in abundance in dark warm places with a never-ending food source. A pet can feed the bacteria daily! This bacteria growth and breakdown of the urine creates amino acids. These complex organic compounds will often work deep into the fibers to a point of becoming part of the fiber. This can present a tricky circumstance. The waste materials and gases from the decomposing urine create an unpleasant odor. When dried urine is rewet, it gives off an ammonia odor. If smelled once it is never forgotten.
The second source of odor is chemical odor that is present even when the bacteria have been eliminated. This explains the reason that more than sanitizing is necessary to neutralize odors from urine. Urine also presents additional odor problems when the relative humidity is high. The salts and crystals that are left behind as the urine dries are hydrophilic and draw water to them. Dried urine is often easy to smell in the humid months because the salts attract the moisture, the moisture evaporates putting out a greater proportion of ammonia odor. You must get rid of the urine salts in and under the carpet to get rid of the odor. That’s why cleaning existing urine spots WILL NOT remove any associated odor. In fact, it could INCREASE the odor in the air space for a temporary period of time.
Do-It-Yourself Pet Stain Removal
The best tool to have is a small one gallon wet-vac or small spot removal machine. We recommend a small machine because the more convenient, the more likely you are to get it out for an accident.
If you can get the urine up while it is new, the more likely of 100% removal. Simply suck the urine right out of the carpet. Then apply some of The Clean Living Company’s Spotter and let it sit a few minutes. Then pour a measuring cup of warm water on the spot and suck it out to rinse the carpet. Always dry the carpet as much as possible and never scrub or rub the carpet. This will distort the face fiber and break down the fiber protection and allow for easy staining.
If the urine spot is older than 24 hours, apply The Clean Living Company’s Spotter, rinse the carpet with warm water and wet vac. Then you can mix 1 part white distilled vinegar with 2 parts water and apply it to the spot, rinse with warm water, and wet vac. Do not use the vinegar on fresh spots as the acid from the vinegar can not counter the acid from fresh urine. The vinegar works best after 24 hours when the urine has become alkaline.
The Best Cleaning Agents For Urine
Enzymes are the best cleaning agent for urine, vomit and feces. An enzyme is the only cleaning agent that actually eats up the bad bacteria. For the best results use an enzyme spotter after you have rinsed the carpet, especially if the spot is not a fresh one. We recommend Nature’s Miracle, which can be purchased at any local pet store. Always read the directions before use!
Products to Avoid
Do not use products with high pH such as ammonia, Resolve and oxygen bleaches. These products will leave the carpet with a sticky residue and in a high pH state enabling the carpet to attract dirt. The use of the wrong product may cause the urine stain to be permanent. Please call The Clean Living Company first if you are wanting to try something your uncertain of.
How Professionals Remove Odor
Remember, in order to remove the odor, all of the alkaline salt deposits of the urine must be removed. This can be extensive and time consuming. Worse case all of the following steps will be done. When damage minimal a few steps are left out.
- Step 1: Pull up carpet.
- Step 2: Remove affected pad.
- Step 3: Clean back of carpet.
- Step 4: Treat floor with an enzyme treatment.
- Step 5: Seal floor if needed with an odor barrier.
- Step 6: Treat back of carpet with enzyme treatment.
- Step 7: Install new tack strip.
- Step 8: Install new pad.
- Step 9: Re-install carpet.
- Step 10: Clean carpet.
- Step 11: Topically apply enzyme.