Yes, rubber is waterproof, which is why early rain gear was cloth that was coated with rubber. It dries out and cracks over time.
No it cant water will run straight of it due to the bond of the rubber
Rubber does not absorb water
Yes it does :)
no water has no affect on rubber
Rubber is not soluble in water.
yes
what is it tell me.
Yes
Not
many things some examples are tempered steel, plastics of almost all kinds, rubber, rock(to a certain degree), and many other treated metals
They dissolve faster in hot water.
Mercury Iron Carbon tetrachloride Rubber stopper Water Cork Oil Air You might want to think of something better than a rubber stopper; they tend to gum up and dissolve into the carbon tet layer after a while.
no
Yes. Rock salt, which is largely the same as table salt, will dissolve in water.
- Sand does not dissolve in water- Plastic does not dissolve in water- metals do not dissolve in water
Yes, It Does Dissolve in water.
No, but salt does dissolve in water.
No. Lipids do not dissolve in water.
mixture dissolve in a water
Yes it does dissolve in tap water. It can really dissolve in any water.
Nutilite's vitamins dissolve in water.
No. Ionic bonds dissolve in water the best.
A substance is 'insoluble in water' if it will not dissolve in water, although it may dissolve in another solvent.
yea water can dissolve polar compounds
water can dissolve: coco,milo,hot chocolate coffee sugar salt
A substance is 'insoluble in water' if it will not dissolve in water, although it may dissolve in another solvent.