Pepper is a different chemical to that of detergent and therefore they repel each othere and the pepper moves as far as it can from the detergent which is the edge of the bowl.
how can you separate sugar and pepper cause you dont say nothing bout it
It is not so much the chemical but what it does. Detergents act as a surfactant or an additive that reduces waters cohesion or the ability of the water molecules to hang onto one another. As you add the detergent, the water without the detergent hangs on to itself and the pepper, causing the pepper to be drawn away from the detergent/surfactant.
pepper is a different chemical to that of detergent and therefore they repel
pour liquid detergent into water with pepper.. maybe the surface tension interactions but that is some scientific stuff
Runaway pepper is a chemical reaction because when you drop the detergent into the water, it reduces the cohesiveness between the water and the pepper. The soap breaks the surface tension of the water and the tension on the rest of the water pulls the floating pepper away from the soap. In other words, it reduces the pulling action on the pepper and the pepper appears to run away from the detergent. But the water around the edges (untouched by the detergent) still has its full pulling strength.[= ~ ! ~ x.Contagious.Sickness.x ~ ! ~ =]^----^(=^_^=)--->o
yes it does
Vibrations should make the lighter pepper rise to the top.
no it's impossible to do that but if you ask the company that made it
a magnet will pull the iron out of the black pepper
With tweezers and a magnifying glass.
Washing machines have separate compartments for detergent to ensure that the detergent is added at the right time during the wash cycle. One compartment is for pre-wash or pre-treat detergent, while the other is for main wash detergent. This helps optimize the cleaning performance of the detergent.