Yes. Due to the Law of the Conservation of Matter, anything combined with water will increase in volume, because water itself has volume, which is not lost by combining water with anything else.
Caffeine is soluble in water - but not HIGHLY soluble. You can dissolve a lot more caffeine in the same volume of water compared to what will dissolve in an equal volume of acetone. It dissolves better in hot acetone than in cold acetone.
They mix. Acetone is soluble in water. It changes the color to a milky white, while thinning the water. Note: I had another chemical that's only soluble in acetone already dissolved in the acetone when I once tried adding water to increase the volume of the mixture. (I wasn't really thinking it through when I did it.) Anyways, this could be responsible for the color change, but I know that they do definitely mix, and it thins out the water. A potential benefit of the thinning aspect is that if you wanted the water to seep through a small opening, and you had a slow drip or no drip, after adding acetone it will go right through.
You can use a graduated cylinder or a measuring cup filled with water to determine the combined volume of three small rocks. Simply measure the initial water level, then add the rocks and measure the new water level for the volume displaced, which represents the combined volume of the rocks.
Concentration increases
To make a 50% acetone control, you can mix equal parts of acetone and water. For example, if you start with 10 ml of acetone, you would add 10 ml of water to make a 50% acetone solution.
Water weighs more than acetone. This is because water has a higher density than acetone, meaning that a given volume of water will have a greater mass compared to the same volume of acetone.
Caffeine is soluble in water - but not HIGHLY soluble. You can dissolve a lot more caffeine in the same volume of water compared to what will dissolve in an equal volume of acetone. It dissolves better in hot acetone than in cold acetone.
To calculate 8% of acetone, you would multiply the volume of the acetone by 0.08 (which is the decimal form of 8%). For example, to make 8% of 100ml of acetone, you would mix 8ml of acetone with 92ml of another substance (e.g., water).
They mix. Acetone is soluble in water. It changes the color to a milky white, while thinning the water. Note: I had another chemical that's only soluble in acetone already dissolved in the acetone when I once tried adding water to increase the volume of the mixture. (I wasn't really thinking it through when I did it.) Anyways, this could be responsible for the color change, but I know that they do definitely mix, and it thins out the water. A potential benefit of the thinning aspect is that if you wanted the water to seep through a small opening, and you had a slow drip or no drip, after adding acetone it will go right through.
The total volume of the solution is 78.9 mL + 1550 mL = 1628.9 mL. To calculate the percent by volume concentration of acetone, divide the volume of acetone by the total volume of the solution and multiply by 100. In this case, (78.9 mL / 1628.9 mL) x 100 = 4.85% volume concentration of acetone.
The volume of an object can be determined by the displacement of water. By dropping the object into a measuring container of water, where the volume of the water is known, the object's volume can then be calculated by subtracting the volume of the water by the volume of the water and object combined.
You can use a graduated cylinder or a measuring cup filled with water to determine the combined volume of three small rocks. Simply measure the initial water level, then add the rocks and measure the new water level for the volume displaced, which represents the combined volume of the rocks.
No, acetone is about the same viscosity as water.
Yes, in a chemical reaction between distilled water and acetone, the total volume of the reactants remains the same. This is because matter is neither created nor destroyed in a chemical reaction, so the total volume remains constant.
Acetone and water are miscible liquids.
No, it does not. The volume of water changes according with it's temperature. Water, unlike other substances, it has a minimum volume at 4 degrees Celsius.
The density of water does not change when the volume changes. This is because density is a proportion of weight to volume. The density of water changes with temperature, but is approximately 1g/ml.