Vinegar is a solution of an acid called acetic acid. Baking soda is called bicarbonate. If you mix both of those chemicals together bubbles start forming. Then the bubbles
make a gas called carbon dioxide.
Because HC2H3O2 (the acetic acid in vinegar) + NaHCO3 ("baking soda") gives:
NaC2H3O2 (sodium acetate) + H2CO3 (carbonic acid).
The carbonic acid then breaks down into H2O (water) and C2O( carbon dioxide).
Vinegar is acetic acid (HC2H3O2). Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3). When you mix them you produce carbonic acid (H2CO3), which is not a stable species and dissociates into H2O and CO2. So basically its the bicarbonate ion falling apart under acid attack.
it depends on what your control is and how much of it you are using. If you have 4 ml of vinegar and 1 ml of baking soda then you will create 75 ml.
That depends on how much of it you want to make doesn't it.
Yes, it is true; it is a very simple reaction.
carbon and oxygen.
Yes
Baking soda and vinegar, when mixed, will produce the gas carbon dioxide ( CO2)
The easiest way is to get some baking soda and vinegar, and mix them together.
Carbon dioxide is produced. The amount of baking soda to vinegar control the amount of CO2 that is produced.
Because you have more reactants going into the reaction, so the greater the products (Co2 gas and the foamy bubble).
when the vinegar and baking soda meet, they bubble
They can make salt, water, vinegar, CO2, and baking soda.
H2O AND CO2 AND NaC2H3O2
baking soda reacts with vinegar to produce sodium acetate and carbon dioxide
vinegar, lemon juice....... basically anything acidic. baking soda takes the acidity out of things so anything thats acidic will create a reaction.
If I remember correctly, an escape of CO2
CH3COOH + NaHCO3 = CH3COONa + CO2 + H2O
you get CO2 and other chemicals that flows out as bubbling foam