Ammonia (Damages copper/brass fittings) and alcohol mix well in water. Imagine your Urea in a toilet and alcohol and brake fluid (water rusts brake components, replace brake fluid regularly) is hygroscopic which "sucks" attracts moisture out of the air surrounding these fluids. Alcohol is impossible to remove all moisture completely. This is the reason 99.9% alcohol fluids is the strongest concentration you can buy and listed as a damaging solvent. 40 proof or 20% alcohol in hard liquor is average. 30% ethanol by weight (60% proof) should freeze at -20°C. Your 90 proof spirits (45% by weight) would freeze at about -30°C. 25oz alcohol to one gallon water protects from freezing -5 F / -20C
What most people call "ammonia" is actually a solution of what chemists call ammonia in water. If you mix household ammonia with lighter fluid, they won't mix. Lighter fluid is probably (mostly) butane, which is not exactly miscible with water. I'm not actually positive whether it's miscible with "real" ammonia or not in the liquid state, but I doubt it; ammonia is polar and butane is not.
To prepare a dilute ammonia solution, mix a small amount of concentrated ammonia solution with a large amount of water in a clean container. Always add the ammonia solution to the water slowly and carefully, as ammonia is caustic and can release fumes. It's important to wear proper protective gear such as gloves and goggles while handling ammonia.
Ammonia is the solute and the solvent is the water.
When you mix ammonia (NH3), iron(III) oxide (Fe2O3), and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a complex series of reactions can occur. The iron(III) oxide can catalyze the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen gas. Ammonia can act as a weak base in this reaction. The overall result would depend on the concentrations and conditions of the reactants.
The result it a common base called ammonia.
you can mix water with anything
no
Yes, a 50/50 mix of antifreeze and distilled water.Yes, a 50/50 mix of antifreeze and distilled water.
depends on what kind you buy , you can buy premixed (already has water added ) or just plane antifreeze ,then you need to mix it 50/50 with water
No, a 50/50 mix of Antifreeze and Distilled water is the proper mix.
Lack of antifreeze or wrong mix of antifreeze and water.
It uses a 50/50 mix of water and antifreeze/coolant
distilled water and antifreeze - usually 50/50 mix - up to 60 % antifreeze in cold climates for Ford Vehicles
In a vehicle engine cooling system : ( DISTILLED WATER is PREFERRED ) Usually mixed 50 / 50 with antifreeze , Ford states not to exceed 60 % antifreeze in the mix
A 50/50 mix of Green antifreeze and distilled water.
Ford vehicles come from the factory with 50 / 50 mix of antifreeze and distilled water Ford says minimum 40 % antifreeze and maximum 60 % antifreeze for proper engine protection
About 2 gallons of a 50/50 mix of antifreeze and water