A common mixture that creates fizz is baking soda and vinegar. When baking soda (a base) is combined with vinegar (an acid), they undergo a chemical reaction that produces carbon dioxide gas, resulting in bubbles and fizzing. This reaction is often used in science experiments and can also be found in some cleaning applications.
It makes a mixture.
it does not fizz it dissolves
A mixture is two or more substances combined together with actually reacting chemically. So, be it homogeneous or heterogeneous, a mixture is a mixture if it fits this definition.
Smaller ice cubes tend to make a bigger fizz in drinks because they have more surface area in contact with the liquid, causing faster and more energetic bubbling. This is because smaller cubes melt quicker and release carbon dioxide gas more rapidly, creating a larger fizz.
B) A carbonated drink is an example of a gas-liquid mixture. In this case, carbon dioxide gas is dissolved in the liquid, creating bubbles and fizz when the pressure is released. The other options do not represent a gas-liquid mixture in the same way.
The "fizz" is a mixture of tonic and carbonated waters.
carbon dioixide makes drinks fizz
What is the acid that makes Coke and Pepsi fizz?
it doesent have as much carbon dioxide as other cokes that do fizz
it will fizz a little
carbonation.
Yes. The "fizz" depends on how much the factory makes it with. Color does not effect fizz.
Fizz in fizzy drinks is dissolved carbon dioxide (CO2) coming out of solution. That's all that is in fizz.
carbonation!!!!!!!!!!
carbonation
Carbon dioxide
carbon dioixide makes drinks fizz