IT can dissolve a paper clip, but it cant dissolve meat or a nail.
No, Sprite cannot dissolve a paper clip. Sprite is a carbonated soft drink consisting mainly of water, sugar, and carbon dioxide, which are not strong enough to dissolve metal like a paper clip.
Carbonated drinks like Sprite, 7-Up, and Mountain Dew are basic in nature and would turn red litmus paper blue. Colas and other acidic drinks would turn blue litmus paper red due to their acidic nature.
Blue litmus become red because the carbonated soft drinks are acidic solutions.
Yes, magnets attract paper clips because paper clips are made of a magnetic material like iron. The magnetic field produced by the magnet causes the paper clips to be attracted to it.
Carbonated drinks contain dissolved carbon dioxide gas. When you open the bottle or can, the pressure is released, causing the carbon dioxide to come out of solution as bubbles. These bubbles rise to the surface of the liquid, creating foam due to their buoyancy and the release of gas.
It is not possible to give an exact number of paper clips in 1 mole since mole is a unit used for counting atoms or molecules, not larger objects like paper clips. However, 1 mole of paper clips would contain Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23) of individual paper clips.
Paper Clips Project was created in 2004.
paper clips
10 paper clips is 7.5 inches, so 7.5X100,000= A million paper clips
Any acid will turn litmus paper red, Household examples would be most juices, vinegar, and carbonated drinks.
Yes, both metal paper clips and plastic paper clips are mixtures. Metal paper clips are made of metals like steel, while plastic paper clips are made of polymers like polypropylene. Both of these materials are composed of multiple substances mixed together to form the final product.
The number of 1 kg paper clips in a box depends on the size and weight of the paper clips. The weight of individual paper clips vary, so the number of paper clips in a 1 kg box will differ based on the weight of each clip.