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BR1️⃣ For most people, swimming pools feel like one of the cleanest places imaginable. The sharp smell of chlorine, the clear blue water, and strict hygiene rules create the impression that everything inside the pool is constantly disinfected.
2️⃣ But infectious disease specialists often explain that the smell people associate with “clean pool water” is actually something else entirely. Pure chlorine itself has very little odor. The strong smell many swimmers notice comes from chemical reactions happening in the water.
3️⃣ When chlorine mixes with substances brought into the pool by swimmers, new compounds form. Sweat, sunscreen, cosmetics, and tiny biological residues can react with chlorine and create what scientists call chloramines.
4️⃣ These compounds are responsible for the familiar “pool smell” and can also irritate the eyes or skin of swimmers. The more organic material enters the water, the more these reactions occur, even though the disinfectant itself is doing its job.
5️⃣ For doctors who understand the chemistry behind it, the lesson is simple rather than alarming. Pools remain safe when they are properly maintained. But the science behind the smell reveals something many people never realize: the strongest “clean pool” odor often means the chlorine is actively reacting with everything swimmers brought into the water.
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