No because there are no available ions to react with in distilled water.
It has something to do with osmosis....
Distilled water is when it is just h2o, any positive results would man that it was not/is not distilled.
Distilled water is a compound, not a mixture, because it is just pure H2O.
because when co2 dissolves in water, it creates carbonic acid which is very acidic...when titrating an acid/base reaction, this requires more base since the "water" would now be acidic
Yes, as it will serve to dilute the concentration of the sodium hydroxide being placed in the buret. You will being adding a known concentration of sodium hydroxide and ending up with an unknown concentration.
no
no
If a cucumber is placed in distilled water, the water molecules will flow into the cell by osmosis. This happens because the distilled water solution has a lower osmotic pressure than the cucumber cell.
get larger and then smaller again
get larger then smaller... XD
What experiment?
It has something to do with osmosis....
Caustic soda solution - even worse - metallic sodium which would be so exothermic it would ignite
Nothing will happen. It will continue to be a bell, its metallic composition will not change, nor will its shape, colour, etc.
No because zinc is more reactive than tin so it dilutes it
Answer:- I HAD CHECKED DISTILLED WATER AND RAIN WATER, BOTH, BY A SPECIAL METER BUT BOTH WERE STILL IMPUREThe prefered water would be "distilled" so as not to add impurities to the electrolyte mix. In a bind filtered tap can be used in small quanties.
Distilled water is close to pure water, and if it was distilled in a clean environment it would be pure water. Thus no, it would not have maltose ( a sugar) in it.