Can the amount the balloon fills up be controlled by amount of baking soda
No
It doesn't matter as long as the conditions are the same. Temperature, gas pressure, speed with which you fill the balloon, and so on.
When mixing the two chemicals in baking soda (called sodium bicarbonate) and vinegar (called acetic acid), you cause a chemical reaction to occur. Carbon dioxide is one result of that reaction. Once the carbon dioxide fills up the bottle, it has no where else to go but into the balloon filling it up as more carbon dioxide is created. Also how you make a soda blow up is by going into a dark ally and looking for a stick of dinamite.
Gas completely fills its container, liquid stays as a unit and fills the container with respect to gravity, and solids do not fill their containers
cytoplasm
Can the amount the balloon fills up be controlled by amount of baking soda
Yes! if you have too much of one then it cannot completely react but will fill the balloon up 100% comparatively. if you have the right amount then it will not waste a lot and will fill up the balloon 90% comparatively. if you don't add enough of one then you will fill it up a lot less like 50% comparatively. (but one of the ingredients has to be constant)
Why would we be that sad to find that out?!
Vinegar is an acid and baking soda is an alkali. If an acid and an alkali react with each other they produce a salt, water and hydrogen gas. the gas produced can be used to inflate the balloon.
Yes! if you have too much of one then it cannot completely react but will fill the balloon up 100% comparatively. if you have the right amount then it will not waste a lot and will fill up the balloon 90% comparatively. if you don't add enough of one then you will fill it up a lot less like 50% comparatively. (but one of the ingredients has to be constant)
the balloon fills with gas
Yes. Mixing vinegar and baking soda releases carbon dioxide (CO2) gas. If you can add the two together and quickly attach a balloon to the container (and close any other openings), the balloon will inflate with CO2
The balloon inflates with carbon dioxide because mixing baking soda and vinegar causes a chemical reaction between the acetic acid in vinegar and sodium bicarbonate in baking soda. Once the reaction completes its first step, the product is carbonic acid that decomposes into carbon dioxide and water. When the entire reaction is complete sodium acetate, water, and carbon dioxide remain. The carbon dioxide is the gas that fills the balloon.
Helium which is a lighter-than-air gas, allowing the balloon to float upwards.
No
fills up ur waterbaloons
Self-Inflating balloons use a chemical reaction to generate gas that fills the balloon automatically when a seal is broken. By mixing vinegar and baking soda, a chemical reaction produces carbon dioxide gas, inflating the balloon. This type of balloon is often used for educational purposes or novelty items.