Water has covalent bonds.
Soap is a non-polar molecule that breaks weak hydrogen bonds between water molecules, so it makes the water less cohesive.
Water has a polar molecule with covalent bonds.
no bonds are broken the compound is changing phase not breaking bonds
Within a water molecule is covalent bonds. between water molecules are hydrogen bonds.
the surface tension has bonds, and the soap breaks those bonds, so if the soap water is put onto a surface.. it will slip off
covalent bonds
Soap will lower the surface tension of water. Like any surfactant soap will lower the surface energy by disrupting the strong inter-molecular hydrogen bonding that confers such a strong surface tension to water.
Water has covalent bonds.
Soap is a non-polar molecule that breaks weak hydrogen bonds between water molecules, so it makes the water less cohesive.
screw science eat cheese
The soap changes how pepper reacts in water because it reduces surface tension, making it easier for the pepper to move away from the areas where the soap disrupts the water's surface. This effect is due to the soap molecules breaking the bonds between the water molecules, causing the pepper to rush to the edges of the container.
Hydrogens Bonds
Hydrogen bonds
it always depends on how much soap so I cant answer that question...sry
Water has a polar molecule with covalent bonds.
Water molecules are associated by hydrogen bonds but I suppose that these bonds are not the weakest.