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A water bath is used for heating alcohol, as this keeps alcohol (flammable) away from open flames.
The water fleas heart rate decreases. The amount of decrease solely depends on the concentration of the alcohol.
Tricky question. Are you talking about the concentration of salt in the water or the concentration of water in the salt? It is unusual to talk about the concentration of water unless it is dissolved in another solvent like alcohol. Pure water has a constant concentration of 55.6 mol/dm3. Water is more concentrated without salt in it.
The solute is iodine. The solvent is a mixture of alcohol and water. There is no single fixed ratio for the mixture of alcohol and water but it usually is around a 50/50 mixture of water and alcohol with the iodine ranging from about 2% to 7% in concentration.
Yes. Water can be split into hydrogen and oxygen by electrolysis. The hydrogen that results is flammable.
Not all liquids are flammable. Some liquids that are flammable are gasoline, alcohol, oil. Liquids like water are not flammable.
Rubbing alcohol is flammable because it contains isopropyl alcohol which is a volatile and flammable organic compound. The fumes of the alcohol will catch on fire if they come into contact with flames.
If the concentration of alcohol and water solution is 25 percent alcohol by volume, the volume of alcohol in a 200 solution is 50.
You get a mix of alcohol and water You get dull beer.
A water bath is used for heating alcohol, as this keeps alcohol (flammable) away from open flames.
Because the concentration of alcohol is lower; you pay the alcohol not the water.
The water fleas heart rate decreases. The amount of decrease solely depends on the concentration of the alcohol.
Distillation produces alcohol. Alcohol is flammable, but there is either not enough alcohol or too much water in vinegar for it to burn. Though you may be able to boil it down so it will burn, but I have not yet tested this.Please correct me if I am wrong.P.S I know boiling will remove most of if not all of the alcohol.Corrected: It is flammable i just has a little fire tho. Still don't play with fire.
No. Hydrogen peroxide is not flammable, especially since the commercial concentration of 3% is 97% water. In high concentrations above about 50% hydrogen peroxide is a dangerous oxidizer that, while not flammable itself, can set other materials on fire.
Water is not flammable. The noble gases are not flammable.
Tricky question. Are you talking about the concentration of salt in the water or the concentration of water in the salt? It is unusual to talk about the concentration of water unless it is dissolved in another solvent like alcohol. Pure water has a constant concentration of 55.6 mol/dm3. Water is more concentrated without salt in it.
It is to do with the fermentation process, the concentration of alcohol is differed and hightened based on the amount of water in the wine, and expense.