limestone dissolves from it thus creating caves and caverns.
carbon dioxide
The salt dissolves in the water and the iron does not.
carbon dioxide is added to it which form bubbles to make it sparkle
Yes and no it depends on what the powder is, water will dissolve salt sugar and other powder like them but will not dissolve most other things, it usually only lets in things that can make a hydrogen bond.
Calcium chloride, carbon dioxide and water
carbon dioxide
Sulfur powder will float on the surface of the water.
Baking powder is mostly a mixture of two water soluble dry powders:Baking soda, sodium bicarbonateA weak organic acid salt, usually Cream of TartarWhen water is added to this mixture, the powders dissolve and react producing Carbon dioxide bubbles.
when baking powder combines with water, it turns into carbon dioxide which rises in the pastry, causing it to puff
Concrete is made from cement and added gravel. Cement starts out as a powdered rock, which will remain a powder unless water is added to it. Water turns it unto a paste which will gradually harden into a solid material. The water undergoes a chemical reaction with the cement powder.
yes it creates carbon dioxide
it changes colour from a white powder to a blue powder
The salt dissolves in the water and the iron does not.
The water becomes slightly acidic. If enough carbon is added with sufficient force, the water can become carbonated.
carbon dioxide is added to it which form bubbles to make it sparkle
It decomposes into sodium carbonate, water, and carbon dioxide. 2 NaHCO3 → Na2CO3 + H2O + CO2
Yes and no it depends on what the powder is, water will dissolve salt sugar and other powder like them but will not dissolve most other things, it usually only lets in things that can make a hydrogen bond.