Unless the oil is very hot, no. Water evaporates as a result of heat transfer.
Water, oil, and mercury are arranged in increasing order of density. Water is less dense than oil, which is less dense than mercury. So the order would be water (less dense), oil, and then mercury (most dense).
The oil and water would separate (oil is lighter than water, thus it would float upon the water) Therefore the oil could catch fire and burn until it was all burned without the water putting it out
HOW TO SEPARATE SALT FROM OIL .First of all to separate salt from oil you need to pour some water, salt, and oil into a beaker in that order. .After you have put those materials in the beaker, you should see the salt dissolving, then you should be left with oil and water. .Next to separate the oil from the water you could either, leave the solution for a while and the oil eventually should rise to the top and float above the water, or you could use a funnel with a stopcock at the bottom which will allow you to drain the water out underneath the oil. GOOD LUCK! :)
The plastic disk would float on top of the water but sink below the layer of oil in the glass container. This is because the density of the plastic disk is in between that of water and oil.
Oil and water separate because water is a polar compound and oil is a non polar compound. Or, water has a positive charge on one side of the compound and a negative charge on the other side. It mixes with compounds with charges on one side. Oil does not have any electric charges. It only mixes with a compound that has no electric charges.Oil separates from water for two reasons. First of all, it is electrically repelled from water because the lipid molecules that comprise oil are electronically well balanced whereas water is highly polar. The result is that no part of the lipid is attracted to either electric pole of the water molecule. Despite this, oil and water can be combined via agitation (such as mixing a vinaigrette). However, oil is less dense than water and will eventually float to the top of the oil/water mixture.
It evaporated.
Pure water is evaporated faster.
evaporation; the water evaporated to the air
you can put cheese in it and then drink it
no, oil is insoluble in water. it doesn't completely mix with the water.AnswerOil is NOT soluble in water. If you were to put oil into a glass of watter, you would notice the oil floats along the top. There is a riddle to answer your question:Oil and water did not get along until a slippery object came along.see what this means is if you put oil and water they wont combine together, but if you put soap in with it they will mix perfectly
It would be possible to cause an oil leak while replacing the water pump.
Because the pressure isn't high enough to create an explosion - the evaporated water is free to move out of the oil, and so pressure doesn't have a chance to build up sufficiently to cause an explosion. If however a large amount of water was put in a sufficiently small container of oil at sufficiently high temperature to vaporise all the water instantly, then the container could explode.
oil gets on top of water and oil is flamable
water?
Use water and coal. :D
It's oil! That is, if you put oil in your water then it's probably just some leftover oil that didn't drain out with the water and froze. If you didn't put oil in your water, then I have no idea what it is.
put oil onit