mix saop and water togeher. get you bubble wand and injoy
The molecule that makes up soap or detergent has a polar head and a nonpolar tail. In chemistry, compounds that are polar like to mix with other polar compounds and compounds that are nonpolar like to mix with other nonpolar compounds. This is why oil and water don't mix. Water is polar and oil is nonpolar. Oil and grease are a nonpolar compounds. When in water the soap molecules will arrange themselves in such a way that the nonpolar tails surround the grease creating a spherical droplet. On the face of this sphere is the polar heads of the soap molecule. This allows it to interact with the polar water. This is how soap and laundry detergent are able to remove oil and grease and wash it down the drain.
When soap is mixed with octane the non-polar ends of the soap molecules are attracted with induced-dipole induced-dipole attractions to the non-polar octane molecules. The octane molecules repel the polar ends of the soap and the soap molecules form inverted soap bubbles that attract polar molecules like water.
Oil is a nonpolar substance and water is a polar substance, so the water can't mix with or dissolve the oil.
You can use a hibiscus flower to make dish-washing soap. Take water and add some powdered detergent to it. Then, crush hibiscus flowers and mix them into the soap solution.
Mix it with water
It separates and doesn't mix together. The soap sits at the top of the soft water. Soft water doesn't have that much minerals in it so it doesn't mix with the soap.
soap
The chemical properties in soap break apart the surface tension of water which doesn't allow water and oil to mix. When you add the soap, the two liquids mix homogeneously.
Mix some soap with water.
Assuming the dish soap is on water, it is lipophilic or hydrophobic. It loves to mix with lipids (fats) and dislikes water.
mix lye, water, and fat in large pot. heat and stir. you will get soap.
We use soap with water to inhibit hydrogen bonding, water alone is prone to mix with the dirtiness.
you need very little soap, s few drops in a liter of water are enough
yes, Soap is an alkali When you mix oils, alkali and water, they chemically react and turn into soap and glycerin Soap is very unusual, acting like a snake with two heads. The oily head hates water and the alkali head loves water. When you mix soap and water, this love/hate relationship causes soap to lather.
okay, get some soap, a bowl,and some water. mix the soap and water in the bowl.(dawn would be the best soap) blow through the middle gently and...........BEHOLD!!! A BUBBLE!!!!!!!!!! this is the worst answer ever!!!!
Mix peppermint soap and water at concentrations that effectively kill the insects desired. Increase the concentration if it does not.