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While both acids and bases work in similar ways when it comes to cleaning, there is a very good reason why the detergents we use are bases. In the early days, soap was made by mixing fat with certain chemicals. A fat shortage occurred, making it necessary to make a synthetic product to take the place of fat. What makes a base a better choice than an acid for detergent is that bases react with organic materials while acids react with metals.

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The law of conservation of matter says that the mass of the reactants will equal the mass of the products. In the case of making soap, the general reaction is fat + sodium hydroxide -->soap + glycerin. In this example, the mass of the reactants is 890 g + 115 g = 1005 g. The mass of the products is x grams of soap + 90 g glycerin. Since the mass of the products has to be the same as the mass of the reactants (1005g), one can figure out the mass of the soap. It will be 1005 g - 90 g = 915 g of soap.


What Nucleotide based are found in DNA?

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The nitrogenous base found in DNA but not in RNA is what?

Thymine. The DNA Bases are A-Adenine T-Thymine C-Cytosine G-Guanine The RNA Bases are A-Adenine U-Uracil C-Cytosine G-Guanine.


What is the unique complementary base pairing found in RNA?

In RNA, the unique complementary base pairing is between adenine (A) and uracil (U), and between guanine (G) and cytosine (C).