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It depends entirely on the solution. Sugar solution for example could be drunk!. Dilute Hydrochloric Acid solution would be poisonous.
in lab using acetic acid
When the soap is added, the enzymes in the detergent will break down the lipids in the cell membrane like soap would do to a greasy pan. Also, in the meat tenderizer portion of the lab, the enzymes in the tenderizer will break down the proteins.
Yes, you can find glycolic acid in any old chemistry lab. The chemist can even make it from scratch for you in just a matter of hours. It is very easy to get a bottle.
lab-lactic acid bacteria. baker's yeast etc
sulphuric acid hydrochloric acid nitric acid
The toxic barrels of hydrochloric acid were being dumped in the science lab.
No it does not. we just did a lab in science and nothing happened. it just got wet.
HCL - Hydrochloric acid HNO3- Nitic Acid H2SO4- Sulfuric acid HClO4- Perchloric Acid HF - Hydrofluric Acid
egg albumin contains protein. when hydrochloric acid is added to egg albumin, it denatures the protein. in the lab - the observations were as follows: the solution which was initially gel- like, turned watery and transparent
Add conncentrated hydrochloric acid dropwise to a beaker containing pottasium permanganate crystals
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) is a gas. In the lab concentrated water hydrogen chloride solution (about 37 %, 18 M) is fuming; when opened so very dangerous. Sometimes the water solution of HCl gas is called hydrochloric acid (but this is not valid in all the languages).
Yes, acid + metal -> metal salt + hydrogen
Lab beakers are made of glass, which gives them excellent chemical resistance. Some lab beakers are also made of special plastic like HDPE, and even these can withstand most chemicals like hydorchloric acid.
It depends entirely on the solution. Sugar solution for example could be drunk!. Dilute Hydrochloric Acid solution would be poisonous.
Many metals react with an acid to form hydrogen. A common chemistry lab activity is to react zinc metal with hydrochloric acid to create hydrogen gas and aqueous zinc chloride.
It depends on the concentration. Common muratic acid is around 20-something percent, and if you get some on your skin, it takes around fifteen seconds for anything to set in. Drain cleaner hydrochloric acid is relatively safer, as it is only ten percent. Lab-grade hydrochloric acid, on the other hand, can eat a chunk off your skin in less then ten seconds.