Glacial acetic acid is concentrated acetic acid. It is clear.
Yes it can be, but the reaction might be slower
solubility of glacial acetic acid in ether
Glacial acetic acid is pure acetic acid, not mixed with water. The smell of glacial acetic acid is much stronger than that of dilute acetic acid. Other than the greater intensity, the smell is exactly the same.
Per the MSDS, yes glacial acetic acid is flammable.
Glacial acetic acid is concentrated acetic acid. It is clear.
Yes it can be, but the reaction might be slower
solubility of glacial acetic acid in ether
Glacial acetic acid is pure acetic acid, not mixed with water. The smell of glacial acetic acid is much stronger than that of dilute acetic acid. Other than the greater intensity, the smell is exactly the same.
Per the MSDS, yes glacial acetic acid is flammable.
Glacial acetic acid doesn't have water in it. Acetic acid ordinarily would be in a solution. Acetic acid is a weak acid, but it can be very concentrated. Glacial acetic acid is a acetic acid of a high purity more then 99.75 %
"Acetic alcohol" ( methanol + glacial acetic acid ) > fixation Hydrochloric acid softens the tissue that you can press it to spread out to one layer
Generally speaking, glacial acetic acid expires 3 years from the date of manufacture.
You are leaving out some vital information here. Numbers have no applicability to chemical problems unless they have units attached. So, you could have 15.0 milliliters of glacial acetic acid, or 15.0 moles of glacial acetic acid, or 15.0 grams of glacial acetic acid, but you can't have 15.0 of glacial acetic acid, it doesn't mean anything. You have three different numbers in the above question, with no units attached to any of them. Numbers must have units.
No, acetic acid is always a weak electrolyte.
CH3COOH
Acetic acid is solid or in glacial state during winter