yea because it melts into he vinegar and it is very difficult to reverse this chemical change
Yes, it is a Chemical change, and endothermic reaction. Because it produces new compounds - Sodium acetate, Water and Carbon dioxide.
Yes, adding baking soda to vinegar is a chemical change.
Yes.
No. If you evaporate the water, the drink powder is left behind. No chemical change has taken place.
Hi
This is a description of the reaction between the acetic acid, which is the "active ingredient" in vinegar, and baking soda, which is sodium bicarbonate. This double replacement reaction is covered in another question on WikiAnswers.
They react with each other and go threw chemical change.
Yes
You can get a chemical reaction by mixing baking powder and vinegar together.
Yes. They can. The clues of a chemical reaction are production of a gas, change in temperature, color change, production of a precipitate. If you take either baking soda or baking powder, and you add them to vinegar they both form bubbles in a chemical reaction.
Mixing flour and baking soda is a physical change; the process of mixing them together does not in itself cause them to change into any other chemical. However, when the pastry is baked, then there will be chemical changes.
The thermal decomposition of baking powder is a chemical change.
yes, because the powder reacts after hitting the vinegar.
mixing baking soda with water is a physical change b/c you don't change the chemical structure mixing baking soda with vinegar is a chemical change b/c you change the chemical structure ================= It is definitely a chemical reaction resulting in a chemical change.