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In low molarity and quantity, down the sink with plenty of water
well, sugar is more dense than water. Therefore, sugar will sink to the bottom until it's dissolved into a substance. (:
Being heavier (denser) than water, it would sink.Being heavier (denser) than water, it would sink.Being heavier (denser) than water, it would sink.Being heavier (denser) than water, it would sink.
Well to start off with one the tap water in your sink is a base seeing as how water's pH level is 7
down the sink
It can go down the sink with running water.
In low molarity and quantity, down the sink with plenty of water
Water
how don't you? if it's more dense, than water, it will naturally sink
No it will not float because water is .01 and anything heaver will sink.
Its density.If a substance is denser than water, it will sink. If it is less dense, then it will float.(The surface tension of water also contributes slightly to this.)
You dissolve it in water, and the partial charges of H2O should rip CaCl2 apart into Ca2+ ions and Cl- ions.
It depends on how the substance is shaped. Take 40,000 tons of steel. If you shape it into an ingot, it will sink. Shape it into a ship and it will float.
Absolutely not.
No it is not
A sink or toilet should do wonders
sink