yes it does
Because hot water can dissolve more of the borax and it needs to be supersaturated so that when it cools it cannot hold as much borax in each molecule, so it releases some of the borax into it's natural repeating mineral shape.
Borax Powder usually takes on the form of a white powder that can easily dissolve in water. It is used in detergents, cosmetics (possibly different kinds of make up), and glazes.
For example vitamin A and vitamin E are soluble in oils.
Borax, also known as sodium borate, sodium tetraborate, or disodium tetraborate, is an important boron compound, a mineral, and a salt of boric acid. It is usually a white powder consisting of soft colorless crystals that dissolve easily in water.-----------------------------http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borax
yes it does
Fats and oils.
Because when you mix it the sugar starts to dissolve quicker and borax just sits there
I think ethanol.
If by "perfume" you mean essential plant oils, then yes - oils dissolve in alcohol.
Because hot water can dissolve more of the borax and it needs to be supersaturated so that when it cools it cannot hold as much borax in each molecule, so it releases some of the borax into it's natural repeating mineral shape.
Borax Powder usually takes on the form of a white powder that can easily dissolve in water. It is used in detergents, cosmetics (possibly different kinds of make up), and glazes.
Try acetone. It will dissolve most plastics. Wear gloves to protect your hands (acetone will dissolve all the oils from your hands also!).
The molecules which donot have polar centers donot dissolve in water as fat and oil,
Borax has a solubility of 5.8 grams per 100 milliliters of solution or 5.8 percent at room temperature. However at an elevated water temperature, more borax will dissolve than at room temperature. As the hot borax solution cools to room temperature, it becomes supersaturated. Supersaturated solutions are unstable and the excess borax will crystallize on any rough surface.
Fats and oils are not polar substances, water is.Generally, polar solutes, like simple alcohols, dissolve in polar solvents, like water. Non-polar solutes, like fats and oils, dissolve in non-polar solvents, like benzene (and many others). Rule of thumb: like dissolves in like.
Carbon tetrachloride can dissolve fat and oils.