The oil ends up under the frozen water.
The baking soda dissolves in the water
It depends on how the ice was frozen, but ice (frozen water) will float in water and will probably have a greater density than olive oil, so it will sink in olive oil.
When you freeze oil and water together, they will separate into distinct layers as they have different freezing points. The water will freeze before the oil, causing it to solidify on top of the water. This results in a two-layered system when frozen.
frozen water
Water has a fixed density (depending on temperature), and it is more dense than corn oil by a little bit. If corn oil is added to water, the density of the mixture will decrease. This applies to "room temperature" water and oil. No one should be pouring hot oil into water.
when ice and petrol are in same container ,ice will float on the surface of petrol, because ice is a frozen form of water .As water floats on oil it can not mix in it.
The oil become colored.
the olive oil will form into droplets and not mix with the water
You have a cracked block from the water which expands when frozen. The water for the radiator is going into the oil pan. The oil is coming out the dipstick hole because oil floats on top of water. You should have the condition of the engine evaluated by a qualified mechanic as it may not be repairable.
The bromine water turns from orange to colourless, as it is breaking the double bonds. When the oil becomes saturated, any more bromine water that is added will not turn colourless.
When bromine water is added to oil, if the oil contains unsaturated bonds, the reddish-brown color of the bromine water will be reduced as the bromine molecules add across the double bonds in a chemical reaction called bromination. This reaction is used to test for the presence of unsaturation in organic compounds like alkenes or alkynes.
Emulsifier