The reaction between vinegar and baking soda is an acid base reaction, which produces water, carbon dioxide, and sodium acetate. The water and the carbon dioxide are all driven off when the resulting solution is heated. Thus, assuming all of the reactants were changed to products, only sodium acetate remains.
If your doing GCSE then this is useful:
It is all to do with moles (not the creatures), certain amounts of the substances react and you can use this to work out how much is needed of each to completely react everything. The two react in certain proportions, say 2:1 so for every 2kg of substance 1 you need 1kg of substance 2. With baking soda and vinegar you need certain amounts of each so that there is no vinegar or soda left over.
It I new the chemical formular of the reaction I could work out the 'moles' and from that I could work out how much I needed.
Very amazing:
I could work out the concentration of the vinegar you have by working out how much baking soda it reacts with using titration.
When they are mixed the carbonate breaks down into carbon dioxide gas.
Sodium acetate solution.
it farts
The concentration increases. Eventually, all of the water will evaporate leaving dry baking soda behind.
baking soda and vinegar put the baking soda in first
"Do baking soda vinegar bombs work?"
Baking Soda and Vinegar combinedmake a fizzing reaction when the Acetic acid in the vinegar reacts with Sodium Bicarbonate (baking soda).
Baking soda and vinegar!
The more vinegar to baking soda, the better. I only tested up to 1 part baking soda/5 parts vinegar. Also, add the baking soda to the vinegar, not the other way around.
well no
A balloon containing vinegar and baking soda will inflate due to the formation of carbon dioxide gas from the chemical reaction between the vinegar and baking soda.
Yes. Baking soda is a base, vinegar is an acid.
baking soda= sodium bicarbonate vinegar= aceidic acid
baking soda is a base while vinegar is an acid
Vinegar and baking soda inflate a balloon because the vinegar and baking soda cause a chemical reaction making carbon dioxide, inflating the balloon.