salt and water
This depends on the composition of the two solutions.
You think probable to a precipitate, an insoluble compound.
One way to eliminate the ethanol aqueous interface is by using a method called liquid-liquid extraction. This involves adding a chemical that is selective for one of the phases, allowing it to separate from the other phase. Another method is to use a decanting technique where you carefully pour off one of the phases while leaving the other behind.
Yes, a precipitation reaction will occur. Mixing aqueous solutions of Na2CO3 and AgNO3 will produce solid silver carbonate (Ag2CO3) as one of the products, which is insoluble in water and will precipitate out of the solution.
It is created by mixing gasoline and ethanol together, and then chilling it to about -10° F without forming ice. This creates both a gasohol blend containing about 10% ethanol, and an aqueous stream comprised of some ethanol and traces of gasoline which can be recycled and used to produce more gasohol.
This depends on the composition of the two solutions.
mixing red and blue produces purple.
You think probable to a precipitate, an insoluble compound.
Mixing any color with black produces a shade of the original color. Mixing a color with white produces a tint of the original color.
It is yellow-- mixing red and green PAINT produces brown; mixing red and green LIGHT produces yellow.
depends on what youre mixing.. for example, is it light or paint? all colors of paint together is a filthy brown color.. al the colors of light together is white light.
Maltose. Water and Starch mixed with amylase makes maltose
Mixing red light and blue light produces magenta light.
Combining blue & yellow together - produces green.
That depends on what you are talking about. There will be no mixing of salt and sugar just as solids, but if they were in aqueous solution, you can force a chemical reaction.
i am not a chemist. I am just here to tell you that if you can indeed find elements in their raw form.... mixing them willy nilly is a very bad idea. some elements explode when immersed in water.... keep that in mind. and many are toxic and can be absorbed through the skin.
In order to prepare Nital Etchant, you need to be a chemist. If you are not familiar with different chemicals, you do not want to be mixing them yourself. It has ethyl alcohol and nitric acid in it.