I know that vinegar is 95% water and 5% acetic acid so I think water is just a little bit quicker because I think acetic acid is like a microscopic substance so the vinegar has to also boil the substance where as water doesn't have to.
When you add one substance to another, it makes it harder for the original substance to freeze and easier for it to boil. This is because the new substance blocks the molecules from bonding together, so it's easier to break them and boil, and harder to create them and freeze.
Yes. Vinegar is a dilute solution of acetic acid in water. Acetic acid has a boiling point of about 119° C so the higher the concentration of acetic acid, the higher the boiling point of the solution will be.
No. The acetic acid in vinegar has a higher boiling point than water.
Because now water contain another impurity; the effect is called boiling point elevation.
Vinegar is already a solution of acetic acid in water. When mixed with water you are just diluting the existing solution.
Yes, it raises it slightly.
Yes it does.
Yes
Surger, salt, hard candy, and a horses Salt Lick will dissolve.
Yes water and vinegar form a stable solution.
Soluble means something will dissolve. Sand does not dissolve in water, salt does.
According to my experiments, ice melts faster in water than in vinegar. It takes roughly twice as long to melt in vinegar than water when both the vinegar and water are at room temperature. I think the reason is vinegar is slightly more dense than water and what happens is as the ice melts in vinegar it forms a cool layer of water in the surface. The ice floats so it's in contact with the cool layer. When ice is in water, as the ice melts, the melted water is cooler an denser and drops to the bottom, so the ice floating in water is always in contact with a warmer layer of water.
Vinegar is not a compound but rather a solution of the compound acetic acid and some other materials in water. Therefore, vinegar has variable composition and no molecule, as a compound would have. The molecular formula for acetic acid can be written as CH3COOH, and that contains 3 + 1 or four hydrogen atoms.
the vinegar will dissolve in the water
No. Oil does not dissolve in vinegar just as in water. It is lighter so it forms a layer over vinegar
yes
In order to dissolve chalk in water, vinegar needs to be added. The vinegar has acid in it that eats away at the chalk to dissolve it.
Vinegar is already a solution with water as it's solvent, and Acetic acidic as the solute. So, yes if you pour vinegar into water it will dissolve.
vinegar
Vinegar is more acidic than water (which ideally is perfectly neutral), so the M&M would dissolve more quickly in the vinegar.
Up to one cup of water. After that it is a solution of water in vinegar.
Calcium acetate is reasonably soluble in water, so vinegar will dissolve limestone (calcium carbonate).
no it do not water dissolve faster.
Vinegar is a mild acid. It can dissolve the buildup of salts and corrosion from water deposits.
vinegar is acetic acid and if the lollipop is acidic then it will dissolve fast as like dissolve like..