yes, vinegar IS acetic acid dissolved in water
Yes. Especially considering that it is mostly water already (95% water, 5% acetic acid).
Water added to vinegar will dilute the vinegar. So water will combine with vinegar rather than dissolve. Which is not the same as adding granulated sugar to a hot cup of tea, which means the sugar is dissolved into the tea.
open the vinegar...pour just a bit out... take the vinegar to the water faucet....turn the water faucet on....add water into the vinegar container. Viola! you just mixed water and vinegar.
Vinegar is denser than water because vinegar is made of different substances that are denser than water, so that means vinegar is a little denser than water.
the vinegar will dissolve in the water
The solvent is usually the one that is present in large amount. So, if you had 1 ml vinegar and 10 ml water, then water is the solvent. If you have 1 ml water and 10 ml vinegar, then vinegar is the solvent. But recall that vinegar itself has water as the solvent, so it gets confusing.
The vinegar sit on top of the water because the water is more dense than the vinegar
vinegar
Oil and vinegar is a heterogeneous mixture.
Vinegar is a dilute mixture of acetic acid and water.
Water is not an acid and vinegar is. Another difference would be that water has no odour and vinegar has a very strong odour.
Water is not an acid and vinegar is. Another difference would be that water has no odour and vinegar has a very strong odour.
Vinegar is actually mostly water. It generally does not contain any salt.
Vinegar, it's less dense. Vinegar, it's less dense.