hcl acid
Yes it does. An acid (lemon juice) plus a base (baking soda) becomes salt plus water. So lemon juice and baking soda fizzes and bubbles then becomes salty water.
If the PH of lemon juice at 298 k is found to be 2.32, the concentration of H3O plus ions in the solution would be 0.5 M.
NaCl plus CaCO3 plus water
acid + metal carbonate--> Salt+ Carbon dioxide+ water
It is a neutralistion reaction.
Yes it does. An acid (lemon juice) plus a base (baking soda) becomes salt plus water. So lemon juice and baking soda fizzes and bubbles then becomes salty water.
lemon juice is the juice of a lemon. vinegar is made of acetic acid and water. then buttermilk was the liquid leftover after butter was done churning, but now its just made by adding lactic acid bacteria culture to the leftover liquid.
To substitute for one medium lemon, you can use 2 to 3 tablespoons of the bottled lemon juice.
perfume plus water plus perfume equals perfume+water+perfume.
depends on what kind of lemon juice....*wink, wink*
Death i think
If the PH of lemon juice at 298 k is found to be 2.32, the concentration of H3O plus ions in the solution would be 0.5 M.
Lemon juice is much more acidic than orange juice, and contains less natural sugars and less water. If you substitute fresh squeezed lemon juice for orange juice, the result will taste less sweet and much more sour. It's also a real pain to squeeze more than 1/2 c of lemon juice quickly. So, if the recipe calls for 1 c of orange juice, consider mixing up a weak batch of lemonade (equal parts lemon juice and sugar, plus four times more water than lemon juice.) Alternatively, substituting lemonade from concentrate or out of a container will work just fine. DO NOT substitute lemonade made from powdered drink mixes for orange juice.
RUB the lemon juice into your paper, the writing will disappear. But don't use too much or them writing will not come when you wipe it. Plus, it will look odd to others if your paper is soaked.
Sunlight
nothing except lemon for vinegar would work. even then only if you use a little.
Rust