because it has been in water and it makes the outside layer of the soap wet so if you cut a piece of sap in half and feel the middle it will not be slippery
It is in soap That is what makes it slippery
All alkalines (those with a high pH) feel slippery (like soap).
bases will often feel slippery kind of like oil or soap
I would say you are asking if acid is slippery. Bases have a denaturing effect on proteins that makes them slippery. If you touch bases, like drano or soap, you would find them slippery. Acids simply feel like water.
because bases react with the oils on your skin to form a crude soap, in a process called saponification.
Slippery Soap is in fact a boy
It is in soap That is what makes it slippery
All alkalines (those with a high pH) feel slippery (like soap).
bases will often feel slippery kind of like oil or soap
Soap is a base. Many bases have the same slippery properties that soap does.
Slippery Suds? Does that work?
Caustic substances, such as lye, bleech, and soap, feel slippery because they dissolve the upper layers of your skin!
If you have ever tried to grab hold of an eel, you will realize the similarity between that and trying to catch a slippery bar of soap in a bath.
If you have ever tried to grab hold of an eel, you will realise the similarity between that and trying to catch a slippery bar of soap in a bath.
water causes a chemical reaction which causes it to foam and become slippery
This phrase is likely a metaphor to describe how difficult it was to hold onto the bar of soap while bathing the dog, as if it was as slippery and hard to grasp as an eel. It conveys the idea of the soap constantly slipping out of the person's hand during the bath.
Yes, soap is considered a basic substance. When it is in solid form, it becomes slippery due to hydroxide ions when it is wet.