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This is a description of the reaction between the acetic acid, which is the "active ingredient" in vinegar, and baking soda, which is sodium bicarbonate. This double replacement reaction is covered in another question on WikiAnswers.
It is a physical change.
Chemical.
chemical change
Yes it does. An acid (lemon juice) plus a base (baking soda) becomes salt plus water. So lemon juice and baking soda fizzes and bubbles then becomes salty water.
Yes this is a chemical reaction The fizzing is Carbon Dioxide being generated as the baking soda reacts with the vinegar.
Actually it's a chemical change. The baking soda reacts with the vinegar to produce carbon dioxide gas, which is why it fizzes when you mix the two together. The reaction between the two is listed below: NaHCO3(s) {baking soda} + CH3COOH(aq) {vinegar} ---> NaCH3COO(aq) + CO2(g) + H2O(l)
yes
This is a description of the reaction between the acetic acid, which is the "active ingredient" in vinegar, and baking soda, which is sodium bicarbonate. This double replacement reaction is covered in another question on WikiAnswers.
When you mix vinegar and baking soda together you get a chemical reaction.A chemical reaction occurs producing, Sodium acetate and waterwhen vinegar is mixed with baking soda it fizzes up a lot.8-)}baking soda + vinegar = mini explosionA vigorious release of carbon dioxideIt Bubbles up.It creates carbon dioxide
yes, because the powder reacts after hitting the vinegar.
it gets messy and fizzes and yes dont try it in doors
It fizzes; similar to what happens when you shake up a bottle of pop and open it!
The acidic vinegar neutralises the alkaline baking soda and in the process it all bubbles up and fizzes producing a gas... I can't remember if it's Hydrogen or Oxygen though!
It is a physical change.
it fizzes and bubbles
The mixture would get bubbly and come out in hurry