If you can't answer this your stupid
Baking soda typically appears green on pH paper due to its alkaline nature.
Litmus paper will turn blue when it comes into contact with a substance that is basic, such as baking soda.
If litmus paper is dipped in baking soda, it will turn blue. This is because baking soda is basic in nature and will cause the litmus paper to change color from red (indicating acidity) to blue (indicating basicity).
Yes, you can use baking soda instead of borax to grow crystals. However, keep in mind that the type, size, and quality of the crystals might differ when using baking soda compared to borax. Experiment with both to see which works best for the desired outcome.
Red litmus paper will turn blue in the presence of baking soda, which indicates that the solution is basic.
Baking soda typically appears green on pH paper due to its alkaline nature.
no
Litmus paper turns blue in the presence of a base like baking soda.
Litmus paper will turn blue when it comes into contact with a substance that is basic, such as baking soda.
If litmus paper is dipped in baking soda, it will turn blue. This is because baking soda is basic in nature and will cause the litmus paper to change color from red (indicating acidity) to blue (indicating basicity).
Using Baking Powder Instead of Baking Soda* You need to use 2-3 times more baking powder than baking soda. The extra ingredients in the baking powder will have an effect on the taste of whatever you are making, but this isn't necessarily bad. * Ideally, triple the amount of baking soda to equal the amount of baking powder. So, if the recipe called for 1 tsp baking soda, you would use 3 tsp baking powder. * What I do is compromise... I use twice the amount of baking powder as baking soda (add 2 tsp of baking powder if the recipe calls for 1 tdp baking soda), plus I omit the salt (which adds flavor but also affects rising in some recipes).
Yes, you can use baking soda instead of borax to grow crystals. However, keep in mind that the type, size, and quality of the crystals might differ when using baking soda compared to borax. Experiment with both to see which works best for the desired outcome.
I think you meant baking soda. Baking soda is basic, so red litmus paper will turn blue.
baking soda
no
Yes you can rase pH that way.
baking soda is a base or alkali so when it comes in contact with a litmus paper or solution, the litmus turns blue