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Baking soda is a salt. Lemon juice is a mixture with an acidic pH.
Yes it does. An acid (lemon juice) plus a base (baking soda) becomes salt plus water. So lemon juice and baking soda fizzes and bubbles then becomes salty water.
EXPLOSION!
im not sure
I'm going to assume you've already tried soap and water. Depending on the surface, you could try baking soda, lemon juice, white vinegar, or Febreze. If it's your disposal, try the baking soda, lemon juice, white vinegar, or running citrus peels through it.
Reversible
reversable
reversable
lemon juice and baking soda. :>
Lemon juice
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In a way yes and in a way no. For the individual orange, squishing it to juice is irreversible. However oranges are the result of biological processes and the biological cycles will reproduce a new orange.
== == Washing Soda+lemon juice=co2+other products == == A chemical reaction has taken place between the reactants, washing soda and lemon juice. Carbon dioxide is one of the products. the chemical change cannot be reversed. So it is a irreversible change.
Baking soda is a salt. Lemon juice is a mixture with an acidic pH.
Yes, baking powder reacts with lemon juice. It is similar to baking soda and viniegar. Baing soda is a base, and lemon juice is acidic. When mixed, CO2 is created.
Yes it does. An acid (lemon juice) plus a base (baking soda) becomes salt plus water. So lemon juice and baking soda fizzes and bubbles then becomes salty water.
depending on the amount you add, i think it will be neutral as lemon juice is an acid and baking soda is a base.