Yes. Cat urine is fairly concentrated uric acid, and like any acid, will corrode metals including copper.
YES! It does so very quickly.
I did mine in my scieence fair project and nothing happend to the copper
Iron generally corrodes faster because the oxide layer (rust) does not seal the metal's surface from oxygen like the corrosion on copper does.
As pennies are not made of iron, they cannot rust under any circumstances.However they can corrode. The copper shell will produce a green corrosion product, the zinc core can corrode completely away as a transparent water soluble corrosion product. This corrosion will be very slow in plain water (much slower than iron rusts in water) but will be much faster if an acid is added to the water.
Practically impossible
Copper Carbonate.
Steel will corrode as the iron in it is more reactive than copper.
elements and compound
they will corrode
Actually the copper will start to corrode. and may cause infection.
Pennies don't rust; they're copper. They corrode. The phosphoric acid, carbonation and salt in soda will corrode a penny faster than the other liquids.
Copper in the urine isn't anything to worry about per say. A 24 hour urine copper test simply measures the amount of copper in the urine. There is a genetic disorder called Wilson's disorder that affects how the body processes copper.
If your dog eats paper money, he/she will probably be fine. If your dog eats metal coins, you need to take him/her to the vet immediately for foreign body surgery - metal coins can corrode in the stomach and cause zinc or copper poisoning.
Copper is used as hot water pipes because the copper will not corrode when the hot water goes through the pipes
I did mine in my scieence fair project and nothing happend to the copper
zinc and copper and titanium. good luck!
NO!!! Because they are made of copper NOT iron.
Copper is used as hot water pipes because the copper will not corrode when the hot water goes through the pipes