No. It does not. Orange Juice acid or citric acids go to your stomach only affecting you teeth not any other bones in your body
Because there is acid in orange juice which the plant cannot survive on it eats away at the cells in the plant
No. Adding vodka to orange juice does not make the orange juice magically go away.
Lemon juice. It has a pH of 2.3, whereas orange juice has a pH of 3.3. What is being cleaned off is the CuO and CuCO3 that forms on the penny. Both O2- and CO32- are bases, so the stronger the acid, the more effectively they will be reacted away. I did a quick online search for the pH of grape juice but did not find anything, but given that it lacks the sour taste that orange and lemon juice have (an indicator of acidity), I would have to assume that it is not as acidic as either lemon or orange juice.
No. Baking soda acts as a base. You would need an acid to eat away the calcium such as lemon juice.
A lime with calcium hydroxide is a base.
The citric acid reacts with the oxidation on copper.
the acid eats away the rust
I'd say both. They are both delicious, juicy and awesome! But an Orange is juicy high in C and Calcium. But you have to ''peel'' the peel. An apple is juicy and high in all vitamins. As they say, ''an apple a day, keeps the doctor away!'' But, apple has more acid than an orange, so you have to choose between your teeth or your gut.
Lemon cleans pennies the best because of the acid in the juice.
apple juice,the acid in the apples eats away the enamel that protects your teeth
Acid rain is probably sulphurous acid (H2SO3) Limestone is calcium carbonate. (CaCO3) Remember the general reaction equ'n Acid + Carbonate = salt + water +Carbonate dioxide. Hence H2SO3 + CaCO3 = CaSO3 + H2O + CO2 So the limestone has dissolved in to ,at best, calcium sulphite.
Yes, the OJ starts breaking down the protein right away. You can use any other juice though.