i think it will make a frizzy thing
When baking soda and vinegar are combined, the pH level is typically around 7, which is neutral.
If you mix baking soda NaHCO3into pure water nothing happens. however if there is any acid in the water it will react with it to give of carbon dioxide.Baking powder is a mixture of baking soda and acid and will give a very strong reaction in water and many other liquids
When baking soda and vinegar are combined, a chemical reaction occurs that produces carbon dioxide gas. This gas creates bubbles in the mixture, causing it to expand and rise. The temperature of the mixture may slightly increase due to the reaction, but it is not a significant change.
When baking soda and vinegar are combined, a chemical reaction occurs that releases energy in the form of heat and gas. This reaction produces carbon dioxide gas, causing the mixture to fizz and expand. It is an exothermic reaction, meaning it releases energy rather than adsorbing it.
The ideal ratio of vinegar to baking soda for creating a chemical reaction in a baking soda and vinegar experiment is 1:1.
Do you mean baking soda? If you do it kinda explodes, or bubbles over
When baking soda and vinegar are combined, the pH level is typically around 7, which is neutral.
"How does the ratio of baking soda to vinegar affect the height of the eruption in a baking soda and vinegar volcano experiment?"
When baking soda and vinegar are combined they will weigh less than when they were seperated.
Baking soda and vinegar must react. The reaction yields a gas that inflates the balloon.
A hypothesis is your best educated guess on what the outcome of the science fair project is going to be. So you would first need to come up with the science experiment that you want to do before you can come up with your hypothesis. Example: if your science project was mixing baking soda and vinegar together to see what type of reaction you will get, your hypothesis is your guess on what is going to happen when you mix the baking soda and vinegar together. So my hypothesis for that experiment of mixing baking soda and vinegar together is that it will foam up and overflow from the container that I mixed them in. If that happens then my hypothesis was correct. So you need to have an experiment in mind before you can make your hypothesis for the experiment.
EX: "I can predict that the baking soda will react with the [vinegar] violently and will produce a foaming effect and will emerge from the volcano rapidly"
The chemical reaction that results when baking power is combined with vinegar is irreversible. Once combined, the two elements cannot be separated, and the action of acid on base cannot be reversed.
When baking soda and vinegar are combined, energy is released (in technical terms, the reaction is exothermic). The telltale sign of this is the fact that the substance/s produced are warm.
They swim because of the chemical reaction.
If you mix baking soda NaHCO3into pure water nothing happens. however if there is any acid in the water it will react with it to give of carbon dioxide.Baking powder is a mixture of baking soda and acid and will give a very strong reaction in water and many other liquids
Do the experiment and find out yourself :)