Lemon juice is 2.3 Household ammonia is 10.5-11.9 Salt water is 7.8-8.3 Tap water is about 6.6, (pure water is 7) Vinegar is 3 Tea is about 6.3 Bicarbonate is 8.1 Milk of magnesia is 10-10.5
Aluminium - it is an element... the rest of the substances in your list are compounds.
-Ammonia is NH3 -Vinegar is CH3COOH - and you think it would be C2H4O2 but it's NOT!!! -Baking Soda is NaHCO3 -Milk I'm pretty sure is a mixture, so you will have to find the chemical equation, not formula. -I don't think that magnesia is an actual thing, but MAGNESIUM is Mg. -Epsom salts are MgSO4 + 7H2O
They substances transported by blood.Gases,Nutrients,Water,Hormones,Urea,Ammonia,Other waste materials etc.
Either ammonia or nitrate compounds.
Nitrogen and Ammonia are gases at 0 degree Celsius.
Lemon juice is 2.3 Household ammonia is 10.5-11.9 Salt water is 7.8-8.3 Tap water is about 6.6, (pure water is 7) Vinegar is 3 Tea is about 6.3 Bicarbonate is 8.1 Milk of magnesia is 10-10.5
If you mean basic substances (as opposed to acidic), then here are a few: Bleach Ammonia Baking Soda Milk of Magnesia
A substitute for ammonia-bicarbonate would be baking powder. Ammonia-bicarbonate is used with or without yeast in the baking industry to make dough rise.
Ammonia bicarbonate is nothing at all (nor is ammonia carbonate).Ammonium bicarbonate is a real chemical, and it has formula NH4HCO3 (the combination of ammonium ion (NH4+) and the bicarbonate ion (HCO3-).Ammonium carbonate is a similar chemical with formula (NH4)2CO3, and is the combination of 2 NH4+ ions with one carbonate ion (CO32-).
Ammonia is in many glass cleaners Sodium hydroxide occurs in drain cleaners Calcium hydroxide is used to increase the pH of soil (and is found in Tums, as well) Magnesium hydroxide is in milk of magnesia, a laxative Sodium bicarbonate is baking soda
Converting ammonia to bicarbonate ion seems like something an alchemist would do. Kidneys (ours, at least) convert nitrogenous wastes (things like ammonia or compounds with an amine group attached - R-NH2) to urea, which is far less toxic than ammonia.
I make Danish Christmas cookies and need bicarbonat of ammonia for one of the recipies. I have not been able to find in in any grocery store. However, Ammonium Carbonate (Drugstore) and a couple drops of vinegar will function well. Most drugstores also have bicarbonate of ammonia :-)!
reaction between acetanilide and sodium bicarbonate
water
it can be dried by any dryer at a temperature below its decomposition point (36 0C). Ammonia losses are issue in drying of Ammonium bicarbonate.
People use electricity; inanimate objects or substances (such as ammonia) don't.
There are many substances such as acetone, rubbing achohol, vinegar, and ammonia.