it dissociates
it melts
it acts as a weak acid.
Oil is not soluble in water. That's why two layers form when you pour oil onto water - the top layer being oil (it is less dense than water)
emulsifier. Also, a device that removes oil from water, or water from oil - depending upon its application.
they dont behave in small or large places because they only behave in the water
it dissociates
it melts
When no Air D or destractions in the water .
When two substances do not mix with each other, the less dense substance will float on the more dense substance. Vegetable oil floats on water. If the mystery substance with d = 0.95 g/mL does not mix with water, then it should float on top of water. If the mystery substance with d = 0.95 g/mL does not mix with vegetable oil, then it should sink in vegetable oil.
it acts as a weak acid.
No, it is not. Oil and water do not mix. If you pour oil into water, the oil will float to the surface. If you pour water into oil, the water will sink to the bottom and the oil will float on top.
Some characteristic of light behave like water, but not many.
Oil and water can't mix. They won't go together. The oil with just sit it the water or on top of the oil the water.
Does it look and behave like water? If not, it is a solid.
Miss Behave - 2010 Water Under the Bridge 2-3 was released on: USA: 30 December 2010
Oil in water emulsions have oil droplets dispersed in water, while water in oil emulsions have water droplets dispersed in oil. The main difference lies in the continuous phase, with oil being the continuous phase in oil in water emulsions and water being the continuous phase in water in oil emulsions. This affects the stability, appearance, and properties of the emulsions.