No, boiled water is simply boiled. Distilled water is when the steam from the boiling is gathered and rebottled.
No. They are not the same. Distilled water is only water. Boiled water will likely contain minerals.
Even boiled distilled water will still have oxygen, but the oxygen will not be in elemental form as a dissolved gas.
Boiled water is not the same as distilled water. Distilled water is boiled until it turns to steam, as the steam cools the water is recollected, so what you have is pure water. Boiled water is boiled just until it is sterilized and bacteria has been removed.
No, only use distilled water.
theoretically water when boiled becomes distilled water, boiling water gets rid of any impurities in tap water...so you could say boiled water which is then cooled is cleaner than tap water
No. Fluoride does not break down when water is boiled and remains in the distilling vessel.
Indeed it is. Almost. There may be impurities, because it has not been boiled to evaporation temperature. Do not use it as 'distilled' water.
it doesn't water that has been boiled does as it has been distilled
water is boiled - the steam is captured and cooled back to water. Will remove heavy particulates and other elements.
ordinary water is just boiled to vapor and recollected to filter out impurities
Distilled water has already been boiled so you do not have to do it again. Distilled water has all impurities already removed.
Concentrated alcohols are distilled(boiled then condensed) which create distilled spirits such as vodka.