there is more oxygen in water
Short answer - yes. Even stainless steel can rust in fresh water, given enough time and chemistry of the water.
Some common metals that are susceptible to corrosion include iron, steel, aluminum, and copper. These metals can corrode when exposed to moisture, oxygen, and other environmental factors, leading to degradation and weakening of the material over time.
the amount is the amount of liquid in a orange :)
When you mix water and orange juice you get watered down or diluted orange juice. If there is much more water than juice, you just get a yellowish water with a faint orange flavor. It will not be harmful but it will not taste very good. If you have about 10 percent juice and the rest is water, you an add some sugar and maye citric acid (sour salt) for tartness and it would be similar to buying orange drinks but at a great saving. It just won't have the right color. You can buy a little bottle of orange food coloring, add a drop to the orange drink at it will look normal again.
Think this through. What is the difference between sea water and freshwater? Salt. What does salt do? Rust or create buildups on metal. What types of metal? Several types including iron and steel.
No, because they are plated.
orange juise
I put a 2" square of aluminum foil in a container of orange juice and another in a container of tap water and allowed both to sit for one week. After one week, the one in the water container had turned brownish black and "corroded" more than the one in the orange juice. Why? I dunno. I would have thought it would be the opposite, but it wasn't. Anyone know why? A. The acid in the orange juice acted as a reducing agent to prevent oxygen from corroding the aluminum.
Water and Orange juice are not the same, but Orange juice has water in it, regardless of the fact if it is 100% Orange Juice or not. This is because Oranges grow on trees. Trees take nutrients AND water from the soil. Thus, water is implemented in the making of oranges, and it is in the oranges.
materials: apple juice orange juice grape juice cranberry juice soda water
Water as it is less acidic than either milk and orange juice.
Orange juice is made up mostly of water. So the water in orange juice will evaporate at the same rate as clear water. Of course the parts of the juice that are not water will remain behind. One theory is that the orange juice will absorb more light than water because of its colour.
orange juice because it contains more vitamin C than water.
Short answer - yes. Even stainless steel can rust in fresh water, given enough time and chemistry of the water.
yes
The simply answer is yes. Steel wool does not have a coating that will protect it from rusting in water. But rusting will take some time.
Some common metals that are susceptible to corrosion include iron, steel, aluminum, and copper. These metals can corrode when exposed to moisture, oxygen, and other environmental factors, leading to degradation and weakening of the material over time.