they dont react well, salt pops them
There's no reason soap is made to clean with bubbles.
You can blow bubbles.......
in 1968
It produce lather Because it does not contains the sulphates and chlorides of Mg and Ca.
Saturated salt solution dissolve soap but not salt at same temperature and pressure.
When you add salt to soap it will make more bubbles. not bigger bubbles but more bubbles.
It reduces the bubble volume as the density increase and I think what that guy was trying to say was................ the solution would suck if you add salt to the solution because I tried it and it wouldn't even make soap bubble. I think it's because the salt could have sucked up the water molecules ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ LIES! i did this expirement in chemistry and it created bubbles. The bubbles seemed to be bigger then the bubbles with just soap and water
The answer is simple , Vinegar and salt
Adding salt to water and detergent will not make bubbles. Sugar doesn't effect the mixture, as we seemed to get bigger bubbles than just water and soap. This may also be due to the issue that the person we appointed to blow the water and soap mixture couldn't blow a big enough bubble. - Jelly We also found adding sugar to detergent water made bigger bubbles and it was the same person blowing all of the bubbles. -A
the rainbow effect of the colorful swirls in soapy bubbles.
The bubbles of a soap has no colour compared to the soap because when the soap mixes with the water it looses its colour and the bubbles formed are colourless.
When the soap gets wet it causes it to produce bubbles.
Bubbles are formed from soap when they are mixed with water and there is air. When air is present and water is mixed with soap, bubbles will definitely form.
There's no reason soap is made to clean with bubbles.
Soap and water; soap and bubbles.
Soap Bubbles - 1897 was released on: USA: October 1897
Cyril Isenberg has written: 'The science of soap films and soap bubbles' -- subject(s): Soap bubbles