hiandyesnomaybeso
it turn into rubber once youll soak it into the vingar just like an egg
An egg can turn into rubber when you put in a container of 100% vinegar ......... and a bone can turn into rubber when you put the bone in a container of vinegar as well.. hope i solved your question :-)_
it turn into rubber once youll soak it into the vingar just like an egg
No, salt water is not able to turn to ice.
A turkey wishbone will turn to rubber when placed in vinegar because the vinegar dissolves the calcium. Calcium is what makes a bone hard.
just add salt to it
To turn a bone into a rubber-like substance or object, you can treat it with chemicals such as polyethylene glycol or acrylic acid to create a polymer matrix that mimics rubber-like properties. This process, called decellularization and recellularization, involves removing the bone cells and replacing them with the synthetic material to alter its mechanical properties. The bone structure remains intact while having a rubber-like consistency.
You cannot turn water into salt. They are entirely different molecules built from totally different atoms. You can evaporate ocean water and the salt that was dissolved in the water will remain. Every liter of water from the ocean contains about 30 grams of salt.
When a chicken bone is soaked in vinegar, the acidic nature of vinegar starts to dissolve the calcium in the bone, leaving behind a more flexible and rubbery collagen matrix. This causes the bone to lose its rigidity and become bendable like rubber.
Yes, it does. When the water evaporates, it can not take the salt with it, so if you left a glass of salt water out, when it is evaporated the salt will be on the glass.
As a matter of fact, my science fair project is based on this, chicken bones in different substances. I put one with Pepsi, One with coke, One with Salt water, One with Nail-Polish Remover and One with Peroxide. It was a quite a disgusting experience, but anyway. What happens to the chicken bone(s) in salt water is that they get often very clean, sometimes a bit stained. Most likely if flies get on top of a part of the bone that doesn't have any water, the fly will lay it's eggs and after 2-3 weeks, the bone will have maggots. I assure you that the water will turn slightly green-ish. I recommend, that if you don't want any maggots on your bones, you cover it well and protect the bone from flies or any egg-laying insects. Of course, you probably know, that the bone will not decompose because it has salt, and salt stops rotting flesh from decomposing. Yes, even if you clean the bone from flesh, the bone will still have remains of flesh that you will not be able to see with the normal, human eye; maybe with a magnifying glass. Jesus Fuentes, 10th Grade Student, EDL Homeschooling.
salt is added, or dissolved into it, oceans are about 30 - 33%