Osmosis
To make a rubber egg, you can soak a raw egg in vinegar for a few days. The vinegar will dissolve the eggshell, leaving behind a rubbery membrane that gives the egg a rubber-like texture.
Not much, but if you soak it in vinegar the shell will dissolve!
You soak an egg in vinegar for 2 days. When you take it out after two days it should bounce. If it dosen't put it back in the vinegar for 1 more day.
Vinegar in fact contains acetic acid and this reacts with the calcium carbonate making up the shell of the egg. This reaction gives off carbon dioxide so if you were paying attention you will have seen bubbles coming off the egg as soon as it was added to the vinegar. The membrane around the egg also becomes very rubbery during this soaking in vinegar. This occurs because the acid denatures the protein making up the egg white (albumin). Denaturation of proteins can occur through exposure to acids, bases or high temperature. This is what happens when you cook an egg- the clear egg white turns opaque and white as the protein chains become tangled due to the heat.
i think it should be there for 3 days let the egg sit in the vinegar for one whole day, then next day turn the egg so that the top is now at the bottom and the bottom is now at the top, let is sit for another day. by then you ge tshould be ready to go
To make eggs rubbery, you have to soak a hard-boiled egg in vinegar for around 3 days.
To make a bouncy egg, place a raw egg in a glass of vinegar for 24-48 hours. The vinegar will dissolve the eggshell, leaving the inner membrane intact. The membrane will make the egg bouncy when dropped from a low height.
You soak an egg in vinegar for 2 days. When you take it out after two days it should bounce. If it dosen't put it back in the vinegar for 1 more day.
umm...this wont show the affects of calcium it will show the opposite....a boiled egg will start disintegrating in a few days in some cases it can go up to a week
Soak the egg in vinegar for about 2 days then carefully bounce it in a sink or another place where if it cracked it would be easy to clean. Or you might want to measure the height of how your going to bounce it. If it's higher then 6 '' it'll crack instintly.
Oh, dude, when you soak an egg in vinegar, the acidic nature of the vinegar breaks down the calcium carbonate in the eggshell, causing it to dissolve. This leaves the egg white and yolk unprotected, making them more susceptible to overcooking. So, the egg becomes rubbery because it's lost its shell's support, like trying to walk in flip-flops that are two sizes too big.
yes egg shells can disintegrate in vinegar.