Put salt and ice in a bucket and then set the coke in the bucket. You can also put ice in the coke
What did you observe! This is not a question we can answer as we were not present when the salt was added.
the answer is first bleach than coke then water im in like gr1 and i no that!!! but anywayz you got ure answer ok BYE I don't know who answered above but we are doing a 3rd grade project and the 1st grader is wrong according to our experiment! It depends on the type of nail that is used and how much liquid is used. AIR is the key to rust.... moist or damp air .... I am doing a project on it right now. My hypothesis is that the coke will win. it is coke
its been accomplished by directing radio waves through the salt water. http://www.newscientist.com/blog/technology/2007/09/fire-from-seawater-claim-lights-up-web.html its just a blog story but i read it in discovery news i believe a year and a half ago
Um, not really. NaCl is salt. Flammable typically involves a substance that vaporizes easily at room Temp. Eg, gas, lighter fluid, propane, etc, etc.
The butter fly fish does not like salt water... But it likes to swim in coke and sprite water!
Sea salt is not flammable.
Yes, there is a small amount of salt in Coke.
It taste like terrible sprite!
No, rock salt is not flammable. It is a non-combustible material that is used primarily for culinary purposes and as a de-icer on roads.
Salt is not flammable.
Strong salt water freezes faster than weak salt water, as the added salt lowers the freezing point of the water. Therefore, strong salt water will reach freezing temperature quicker than weak salt water, coke, or Kool-Aid.
Table salt is not flammable
Put salt and ice in a bucket and then set the coke in the bucket. You can also put ice in the coke
When you mix salt with coke, the salt dissolves in the liquid and does not significantly change the taste or composition of the drink.
Salt is not flammable.
I am not too sure about what you are asking. In chemistry, coke is simply carbon. Salt is any ionic compound formed by a neutralization reaction between an acid an a base. Generally, all salts do not react with carbon, no matter what form the salt is in (i.e. solid or aqueous). * Added by Zaminlove: I think that coke stands here for Coca Cola! It frothes up. * Another note: Yes, in US slang coke is Coca-Cola. And sodium chloride (and other substances) can catalyze the violent releasing of carbon dioxide from this coke, forming a column as a little geyser. For a detailed discussion see the link below.