carbon dioxide
Vinegar and baking soda inflate a balloon because the vinegar and baking soda cause a chemical reaction making carbon dioxide, inflating the balloon.
There are a variety of them, but these are most common. - Rocket Bottle - Volcano And the most simple to me would be: This is a very simple project, what you will need is a small water bottle, a balloon (with NO helium inside), vinegar, baking soda. Put vinegar into the water bottle. then take the empty balloon and place an even amount of baking soda into it. then carefully place the balloon (with the baking soda inside) atop of the water bottle, thus letting the baking soda and vinegar react when mixed, and creating carbon dioxide, which makes the balloon deflate. (in other words, making the balloon blow up in action.) its simple a pretty cool. hope this helps. Btw, I'm in fifth grade.
Baking soda and vinegar is the standard way of making a papier-mache "volcano" for a child's science project. The reaction between baking soda and vinegar is immediate and can be quite intense. Too much baking soda and too much vinegar can make the "lava" erupt to the ceiling of the classroom!
The vinegar-baking soda reaction is a chemical change.
Yes, it is a chemical reaction.
The baking soda and vinegar will react making a salt called sodium acetate and the gas carbon dioxide (which will form bubbles) and water. The tin foil will not react with anything and will remain tin foil.
The chemicals of the soda and vinegar collide together making more pressure as it builds and than it just explodes.
Vinegar. This combination also a great for making cakes rise and for cleaning drains too.
The pH of baking soda is approximately 8, making it a weak base.
For making a volcano? When the two are added together, they cause a small explosion, making it look like a small model of a volcano is errupting like a real one.
vinegar is acetic acid, baking soda is sodium bicarbonate, on reaction these two will produce the three products i.e., sodium acetate, water and gaseous carbon dioxide (the latter two are the constituents of the carbonic acid which is unstable and immediately breaks into those two compounds)
Yes - It changes the bonds between atoms, making different molecules.