Yes. They have it on Ebay and at a couple of other sources too. You can also get it at the garden or craft store - it's the stuff you put in the bottom of vases that absorbs water. It's also sold as "fake snow" in craft stores.
Sodium Polyacrylate is used in many different things. Examples would be such things as disposable diapers, laundry detergent, and fake snow, and when you go to the store and buy the amazing growing dinosaurs. Those are only some of the uses for Sodium Polyacrylate.
Baking Soda is sodium bicarbonate, and is not a polymer which sodium polyacrylate surely is.
sodium polyacrylate is biodegradeble if given enough time
Sodium polyacrylate was invented, not discovered. In 1966, Robert Niles Bashaw, Bobby Leroy Atkins, and Billy Gene Harper invented sodium polyacrylate for the Dow Chemical Company.
NO.
Sorry. Sodium polyacrylate doesn't seem to work. Certainly not the way it does with water.
salt
sodium polyacrylate
I'm not sure what you mean by dippers, but Sodium Polyacrylate absorbs water, several hundred times its weight.
when you mix water and polyacrylate you turn a liquid into a solid in seconds
The absorbent goo or slime contains sodium polyacrylate (disposable diaper gel powder), sodium chlorite, and coloring. The dissolver powder contains a de-polymerizing chemical, mostly ordinary salt, that lets the polyacrylate dissolve in water.
babies diaper, absorbmant pad