cotton doesn't "react" to liquids. It becomes saturated with them.
Not all liquids react with baking soda. If there isn't any type of acid in the liquid, therefore, there is nothing for the acids in the baking soda to react with.
Metals are not simply dissolved in liquids; they react with these liquids, including water.
This is a reaction of precipitation.
it is okay body
no, only liquids w/ a ph below 7.0
cotton doesn't "react" to liquids. It becomes saturated with them.
all liquids react differently, they all also react differently depending on the substance reacted with
Teflon is resistant to most liquids.
Not all liquids react with baking soda. If there isn't any type of acid in the liquid, therefore, there is nothing for the acids in the baking soda to react with.
a precipitate
Actually, you can boil liquids, and cotton is not a liquid. If you apply heat to cotton, it would burn before it would boil.
yes it does
Metals are not simply dissolved in liquids; they react with these liquids, including water.
No and yes. If the two liquids do not react chemically then its a physical change, called the enthalpy of mixing, heat of mixing, which can be exothermic or endothermic. If the two liquids react then the heat produced would be chemical.
they did not like it
This is a reaction of precipitation.
Double Displacement