No. Adding vinegar to water is a physical process. You are making a vinegar solution, and the chemical structure of both the water and the vinegar does not change. You can physically separate the vinegar from the water through the physical process of distillation.
No. Entropy increase when vinegar and water molecules mixes. This gives decrease of free energy. thus the the reverse process is not spontaneous. It doesn't mean that the separation is not at all possible. we can separate out by distilling by supplying energy.
D; LOLLOLLOLL ; well first i obviously have the same question expect my question is " Why isn't milk and vinegar reversible . " LOL ^^ someone answer this question pl0xxX?
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NO
- Salt (sodium chloride) react with vinegar (acetic acid) forming sodium acetate. - No.
Neither white vinegar nor water stains clothes. Red wine vinegar may though, as it is made red wine which stains.
A Bunsen burner is an object: it is not a process of any kind.
Yes you can. 1c vinegar in a large load of HOT water.
it can be undone To return to the exact object in the beginning is reversible. For example if you freeze water then thaw it you are reversing it. If iron rusts it is not reversible physically.
Yes, because water can be removed by heating and vaporization.
Yes, because it is reversible
Adding vinegar to water the effect of boiling point elevation occur.
No
Irreversible
Reversible
No because you can't get the vinegar back to it's original state because some of the bacteria has gone inside the milk
yes as the vinegar and baking soda are both diluted in strength
No, adding water to soil is a reversible change. Water can be evaporated from the soil through evaporation or drained out through drainage systems. This allows the soil to return to its previous state before the water was added.
Yes. The vinegar can be made to evaporate, leaving the salt.
No it is not reversible because the salt disolves and cannot come back !
- Salt (sodium chloride) react with vinegar (acetic acid) forming sodium acetate. - No.