to make an indercator you would use a grinder and a grind
A bowl and a grinding stick
If the petals are dried, the best way to grind them is with a mortar and pestle. Add the water in very small amounts, mixing with the pestle.
certainly not! How would your blood cell count have anything to do with a cabbage's growth rate?
Yes it would
it would turn blue because bleech is a base.
I really do not know
You would use a grinder and a grind to mash up the cabbage therefore creating a purple/dark red liquid
A buffer absorbs or releases excess hydrogen ions, making the solution hold at a steady pH. Since red cabbage indicator makes a good pH indicator, it has a neutral pH. any amount of acids or bases added would change the pH of the red cabbage juices. If it made a good buffer, it would not make a good pH indicator.
A red cabbage indicator is a liquid made from mashed up red cabbage which you then put in a liquid to see whether it is acidic or not. If it is acidic the liquid would turn reddy orange and if it was an alkali ( the opposite to acid) it would turn purpley blue. This is if the liquid was clear in the first place.
If the pH of a detergent is usyally greater then 7 the juice of red cabbage become blue to green in this solution.
You can use Red Onion but it doesn't work as well as cabbage. (but of course it does stink)Hope this helps
How would you be able to tell when a neutral pH was obtained?
Personally, I would combine a bicycle and a cabbage.
A beaker of water, an indicator, and a hotplate
There are a huge range of indicators that can be used in chemistry, but I presume you'll be using the basic 'universal indicator' here. A base will turn this indicator (depending on its strength) light/dark blue, or purple if it is quite strong. Or do you mean in terms of chemical reaction?
Cabbage is repollo. It would be cabbage soup.
Global Grind isn't publicly traded at this point and would not have a stock symbol.
When my father saw my first paycheck, he exclaimed, "That's a lot of cabbage!". I would like stuffed cabbage for Sunday's dinner.