When an egg is placed in vinegar, the shell dissolves due to the vinegar's acidity. This causes the egg to increase in size as the vinegar penetrates the egg's membrane, causing it to swell.
When a raw egg is left in a mixture of water and vinegar, the vinegar dissolves the eggshell which is made of calcium carbonate. This leaves the egg membrane intact, causing it to become rubbery and transparent.
What?After two days the egg shell will start to disintegrate (dissolve) and after a week the translucent membrane and the actual egg itself will be the only thing left. It will be rubbery and wrinkled.Why?The acidic content of the vinegar reacts with the calcium carbonate in the egg shell, and dissolves it. Because vinegar is only a weak acid the process takes some time.
when you put it in vinegar it becomes all soft and pickled. Then if you put it in water the egg will puff back up to normal size because of diffusion. The egg had low concentration and the water has a lot of concentration so the egg will puff up.
To make an egg float in vinegar, you simply have to make the vinegar denser than the egg. Its like when you mix oil and water together, if you leave it for a while, you notice that they separate, one on top of another. The substance at the bottom is more dense than the substance at the top. To recreate this with vinegar and an egg, add salt to make the vinegar denser, and then put the egg in. If the egg still sinks, add more salt. Repeat until you get your desired result.
If you put a raw egg in vinegar the egg shell will disolve and will leave the whole inside rubbery. This happens from acetic acid. Acitic acid is used as a solven in rubber, plastic, is chief acid of vinegar. (you could hear more about acetic acid if you ask a Qustion about it.)
the egg will gone
When you put vinegar in a naked egg the shell will decrease its shell then turning into a smelly egg
The egg will absorb some of the vinegar, so increasing the size of the egg.
Because vinegar will dissolve the calcium shell of an egg, the egg will increase in size by about 30 to 60 millimeters after being in vinegar.
a chemical reactions occurs between the egg shell and the vinegar.
When an egg is placed in vinegar, the vinegar reacts with the calcium carbonate in the eggshell, causing it to dissolve. As the eggshell dissolves, the egg absorbs water through osmosis, making it swell in size. This increase in size is due to the influx of water into the egg through the now porous eggshell.
When an egg is soaked in vinegar, a chemical reaction occurs where the acid in the vinegar reacts with the calcium carbonate in the eggshell. This reaction dissolves the eggshell, leaving only the semi-permeable membrane around the egg intact.
I am not sure as to what you are asking but I can tell you that acetic acid (vinegar) dissolves the CaCO3 in the egg shell, thus disintegrating the exterior of egg shell. This is irrelevant of the water (aside from how quickly it happens)
the yolk will get white and it will bounce
vinegar
When you put a raw egg in vinegar, the acid in the vinegar dissolves the eggshell. This leaves you with just the egg membrane. When you then place the egg in saltwater, osmosis occurs where water moves from the egg to the saltwater or vice versa depending on the concentration gradient, causing the egg to shrink or swell.
It turns green