YES!!!!
Carbon dioxide
English sally: because diet has moren. me: it does not have moren liar, it has artificial sugar and more room to fizz. Espanol sugar = asucar me = yo has = tiene
I had to do this for a science project and zero calorie cola worked the best! I used Kroger brand and it exploded 8 feet high! But between cola and diet cola, diet cola went higher! I hoped this helped!
No, it does'nt. Infact Diet Coke has less "bubbles" or carbonation in it the regular coke. this is because when they create the Diet factor in coke the soulution is less reactent to sugars and calories creating less carbonation
you don't want to drink it
Diet coke is less dense than regular coke.
no
too much -- that is why it begins escaping as soon as you open he bottle.
Diet Coke reacts with baking soda due to the presence of carbon dioxide in the soda. When the two substances come into contact, a chemical reaction occurs, producing carbon dioxide gas bubbles. This reaction is similar to the fizzing that occurs when baking soda is combined with vinegar.
The regular coke contains a higher amount of solute (sugar, corn syrup) compared to the diet version which uses concentrated artificial sweetener. The slightly-higher viscosity (thickness) of the regular Coke slows the nucleation of carbon dioxide on the surface of the Mentos candy. The thickness also means that it takes more force to lift the liquid out of the bottle (less height to the gas-driven foam fountain).
The reaction between Sour Skittles and Diet Coke is due to the presence of citric acid in the Sour Skittles. Citric acid is a weak organic acid commonly used as a flavoring agent in sour candies. When the Sour Skittles are dropped into Diet Coke, which contains carbon dioxide gas, the citric acid reacts with the carbon dioxide to produce carbon dioxide bubbles. This reaction creates a fizzy, bubbling effect, causing the Sour Skittles to "explode" or fizz when placed in the Diet Coke.
Regular Coke but diet is still bad for your teeth