Because when the chemicals in the egg emerge with the vinegar acids it dissolves.
The acid in the vinegar
No, vinegar will not dissolve aluminum.
when you put vinger in skittle it will sink but if you put sour skittles in it will sizzle up
Eggshells are made of calcium carbonate, which reacts with the acetic acid in vinegar to produce carbon dioxide gas. This reaction causes the eggshell to dissolve and break down, leaving the membrane of the egg intact.
No. Oil does not dissolve in vinegar just as in water. It is lighter so it forms a layer over vinegar
I thought that you could test pills in vinegar to see if they dissolve. That would tell you if they dissolve in your body.
Eggs do not dissolve in the way that some substances do, such as salt or sugar. However, eggshells can be broken down through chemical reactions like those that occur when vinegar is used to dissolve the calcium carbonate in the shells.
no
No
the vinegar will dissolve in the water
The egg shell is a calcium compound, calcium carbonate. Vinegar contains acetic acid. They react to form calcium acetate and release carbon dioxide, the gas bubbles that you see.
Calcium acetate is reasonably soluble in water, so vinegar will dissolve limestone (calcium carbonate).