It's safe to drink water boiled in this glass IF no poisons have ever been put in the glassware. Borosilicate is the glass originally used to make Pyrex cookware--in Europe they still use it, but in the US a different glass is used that doesn't break as easily when dropped.
Yes you can, but if it gets to hot it might break or crack
Pyrex is a type of borosilicate glass made by Corning. A lot of cookware is made from Pyrex, so I certainly hope it's safe!
No minerals in the water will be remove when it is boiled.
After water has been boiled, its mass will stay the same.
a cup of water that is boiled since it gives more heat.
we did that experiment in our chemistry lab! and from what i remember we just put the salt water in a beaker covered it with this glass cover and heated the water but not boiled i don't think and when all the condensation is off the bottom of the glass cover(it will turn a kind of crusty white) then you have the salt is left over when the water is all gone in the bottom of the beaker!let me know if this helped!
It is the same as it went in.
yes. using a diamond bit and water.
No, humans do not ingest cockroach eggs when they drink water. The only way they would drink cockroach eggs is if the glass or container was full of eggs.
Borosilicate glass has a low coefficient of thermal expansion, which makes it better for situations in which there are wide, rapid temperature changes. For example, if a standard glass container at room temperature is filled with boiling water, the danger of cracking and shattering is quite high due to the inside surface rapidly expanding while the outside is warming up more slowly. A borosilicate glass such as Pyrex doesn't expand nearly as much as plain glass (about one third as much as regular glass). It can thus survive temperature differentials that would destroy plain glass. It is for that reason that laboratory glassware is typically made of borosilicate glass. Based on the premise of the question, a heated glass vessel subjected to rapid cooling (e.g., filled with ice water) is susceptible to shattering into a gazillion shards and slivers of glass.
1 tsp. to a glass of boiled water...8 oz. cool...use as a wash for conjunctivitis.
i swear you be on that 5 in the morning but im workin
No, boiled water is simply boiled. Distilled water is when the steam from the boiling is gathered and rebottled.
Boiled water.
When water is boiled it changes from liquid to a gas.
boiled water
Borosilicate glass was used originally by Corning Glass for all Pyrex products because of its high resistance to thermal shock. The new tempered soda lime glass does not have the same resistance. It is normal window glass that has been tempered to give it heat resistance. Tempered glass, though tougher than normal glass, can still be scratched. This compromises the integrity of the temper and, if moisture gets in, the scratches can cause problems. Borosilicate glass can be scratched as well, but it does not break in the same manner as tempered glass: instead of shattering into many small fragments, it snaps in large pieces.
No minerals in the water will be remove when it is boiled.
No. They are not the same. Distilled water is only water. Boiled water will likely contain minerals.