Detergents and other soaps work to clean things because the molecules each have a side that's hydrophilic, or attracted to water, and a side that's hydrophobic, meaning it helps water grab onto things it wouldn't normally otherwise grab onto. Bubbles are formed with a film of water surrounded by two layers of soap, with the hydrophilic side facing inward and the hydrophobic side on the outside.
You need a soap solution (water mixed with soap or detergent) and air to make bubbles. The soap solution lowers the surface tension of the water, allowing the bubbles to form and hold their shape.
Without detergent it does not. If you add something like washing up liquid to heated water you can get good bubbles (too watery and they won't have the strength to grow well)
Protex hand soap is more likely to produce more bubbles compared to Dove, as it is formulated with ingredients that create more lather and foam. Dove hand soap, on the other hand, focuses more on moisturizing properties rather than producing large amounts of bubbles.
since milk has water as a main component, water has surface tension as the forces adhesion( sticks to stuff like the side of the glass) are stronger that the cohesion (makes water keep to itself) forces
In general, Dawn dish soap tends to produce more bubbles than Gain detergent due to its formula that is designed for greater foaming action. However, the amount of bubbles produced can also vary based on water temperature, water hardness, and other factors.
sulfate
Irish spring dish detergent Irish spring dish detergent Irish spring dish detergent
Palm Olive because Tide Detergent doesn't work. I am doing a science experiment including these two things. Tide detergent did not make any bubbles. I am still trying to figure out why but yah. Hope this helps!
Gain generally produces more bubbles than Tide due to the ingredients and formulation in the detergent that create a sudsy effect. Tide, on the other hand, is designed to be more concentrated and effective at cleaning clothes with less foam. Ultimately, the amount of bubbles produced can also depend on factors such as water hardness and the amount of detergent used.
Ok first of all, NEVER put dish soap in either the dishwasher or laundry machine! It both ends up as a disaster that costs you a fortune, I know by experience... It reall depends on what dish detergent and soap detergent you use. The liquid soaps would make more bubbles faster, but the amount really depends on your brands. I use sunlight 2x ultra laundry detergent and Cascade stain fighter + Dawn. The sunlight makes more bubbles.
beacause they are gay
Liquid laundry soap typically produces more bubbles than powder because it contains more surfactants that help trap air and create foam. Powder detergent may still produce bubbles, but they are usually smaller and less abundant compared to liquid detergent.
Beacause of the light reflecting of the detergent
Adding salt to water and detergent will not make bubbles. Sugar doesn't effect the mixture, as we seemed to get bigger bubbles than just water and soap. This may also be due to the issue that the person we appointed to blow the water and soap mixture couldn't blow a big enough bubble. - Jelly We also found adding sugar to detergent water made bigger bubbles and it was the same person blowing all of the bubbles. -A
Dawn Dish soap my hypothesis was correct about dawn dish detergent
When the detergent/salt/DNA mixture is agitated, the detergent, along with some inadvertently trapped gas, forms bubbles, and these bubbles may stick to the DNA and the histone proteins. They are not formed by any chemical reaction.
downy because there are a million different types of laundry detergent but this brand is made of toxic waste its really wierd i read it off the back one time and i also tested it it was making all sorts of bubbles