heres a really cool experiment, get a egg, but don't peel the shell, and then put the egg, corn starch, and water all into a bowl, and then leave it overnight, but make sure you cover the top, and when you take it out after 3 days you'll find out what will happen to the egg.
The starch will settle to the bottom of the container while the water will stay at the top. When left overnight, the mixture may separate further, with a visible layer of water on top and a thicker layer of starch settled at the bottom.
I am not quite sure what happens when corn starch and iodine are mixed but when corn starch, iodine and water are mixed, it creates a purple solution. The darkness of the colour mostly depends on the iodine. Without the starch with iodine and water, it is deep yellow or brown.
Maltose. Water and Starch mixed with amylase makes maltose
It becomes a colloidal suspension with the corn starch suspended in fhe meduium if water.
You would get gloop that is both a solid and a liquid
There are different ways to starch clothing. You can wash the clothes in warm water with the starch mixed in and then press the clothing while it is wet. This sets the starch in very well and make sure it is even through out the fabric.
when jelly crystals mixed with warm water will desolve.
soak the clothes in water with starch(mixed and boiled) or spray lightly the surface of the clothes before ironing.
You get sweet water when you mix honey with water.
When starch amylase and water are mixed together, the starch is broken down into simpler sugars, primarily maltose. After conducting the Benedict's test, which detects reducing sugars, a positive result indicates the presence of these sugars, confirming that amylase has successfully catalyzed the breakdown of starch. Therefore, the substance present after mixing is mainly maltose, along with any unreacted water and enzymes.
You get a mix of alcohol and water You get dull beer.
Adding water to a starch molecule would lead to the hydrolysis of the starch molecule into smaller subunits such as glucose. This process involves breaking the glycosidic bonds between the glucose units in starch through the addition of water molecules. Ultimately, this results in the breakdown of the starch molecule into simpler sugar components.