No , because if that was the case then everyone would Die as soon as their born .
No, stomach acid (hydrochloric acid) is not the same as the acid used to etch concrete (usually muriatic acid, which is also known as hydrochloric acid). The concentrations and purposes of these acids are different, with stomach acid being naturally produced in the human body for digestion and muriatic acid being a strong chemical used for industrial purposes.
No, stomach acid cannot melt metal. Stomach acid, or hydrochloric acid, is strong enough to break down food for digestion, but it is not powerful enough to melt metal. Metal requires much higher temperatures to melt.
Armour Etch contains a mixture of chemicals including hydrofluoric acid, sulfuric acid, and ammonium bifluoride. These ingredients work together to etch glass surfaces.
A window etch kit would include acid, a corrosive material, to etch the glass.
No muriatic acid cannot etch ceramic tiles because it does not corrode or react with glass or ceramic. That is why muriatic acid is also available in glass bottles.
paint or acid etch
Acid rain helps erode, etch, and decompose rocks.
This is inorganic chemistry.
Yes, sulfuric acid can etch silica by reacting with the surface of the silica to form silicon sulfate compounds. This reaction can result in the formation of a rough surface on the silica, altering its properties.
No battery acid is too thin and will not stay in place plus there's not enough sulfuric acid in the liquid to do the etching.
It burns away copper usually for PCB's
after Cents made before 1982 are bronze - 95% copper and 5% tin and/or zinc. Cents made in later 1982 and afterwards are 97.5% zinc with a thin copper plating. Stomach acid can etch away the copper plating, exposing the underlying zinc core and resulting in zinc toxicity.