This has to do with the properties of various sugar molecules. Some can crystalize, others do not.
Most soft drinks are sweetened with corn syrup. After the soda water evaporates, you are left with the original corn syrup concentrate. This will not dry to a solid unless the air is extremely dry. When exposed to normal air moisture levels, it becomes a sticky syrup again.
This is unlike sucrose (cane or beet) sugar, which can crystalize at common air humidities. In fact, crystals form inside the syrup. Dry sucrose crystals absorb moisture and stick together; you get clumps in your sugar bowl.
In carbonated soft drinks, the solutes are sugar and carbon dioxide. Sugar provides sweetness and carbon dioxide gives the drink its fizziness.
Only rare molecules of sugar can be trained in the atmosphere by water molecules.
You can evaporate the water from the sugar.
The fizzy drink with the most sugar in it is typically a regular soda such as Coca-Cola or Pepsi, which can contain over 40 grams of sugar per 12 oz serving. Other carbonated beverages like energy drinks or some fruit-flavored sodas may also have high sugar content.
Sugar is 'left over' because it is nonvolatile
In carbonated soft drinks, the solutes are sugar and carbon dioxide. Sugar provides sweetness and carbon dioxide gives the drink its fizziness.
yes it is because a sports drink has antioxidants and vitamins to give you energy to be more active such as gatorade, powerade, ect. however a carbonated drink has sugar and other things that go against the nutrients that your body needs.
Because it is toooooooooooo much sugar. Most carbonated drinks have loads of sugar. It makes the athletes heart beat fast, which is not healthy
Yes, because it raises your blood sugar level and your body needs to dilute it with water.
A typical carbonated soft drink will contain 25 - 30 grams (or more) of sugar. The combination of the phosphoric acid along with the sugar really does a number on your teeth. Diet drinks typically contain 1 gram or less of sugar or other carbs.
Disadvantages are that they can wreck your teeth 'cos of the high sugar/sweetener content. Advantages are they taste great. =/
Yes you can. Diet Coke/Pepsi and most diet drinks do not have alot of sugar in them if any. The concern with any carbonated drink is the sodium. So if you have high blood pressure or kidney problems you should stay away from carbonated drinks.
The ideal drink for human beings is water. Unsweetened drinks are next, and drinks that contain sugar or alcohol are in last place. Carbonation isn't much of an issue.
Fizzy drinks aren't inherently worse for your teeth than still drinks. But fizzy drinks tend to be higher in sugar, and more acidic than still drinks, and the sugar and acid are bad for your teeth.
You may associate carbonation with dehydration, but more likely - the beverage is caffeinated, and the caffein is a diuretic, so may dehydrate you. I am thus not answering about carbonation per se, but about its common companion, Caffeine, and its effect. I welcome more comments.
NO, Hi-C Fruit drinks do not, nor have they ever, contained any Caffiene. They are non-carbonated flavored/sugar water.
It is not an homogeneous mixture since CO2 is a non-polar molecule and H2O is a polar molecule. You can easily see this when you are drinking sparkling water (or carbonated water). You are able to see the CO2 bubbles because it does not mix with the H2O