Sugar does dissolve in vinegar. Sugar dissolves in vinegar because vinegar is a mild acid and it eats away at the solid sugars and dissolves. Vinegar dissolves the sugar faster than water does.
Yes it will. There are a number of kids experiments that show this using candy canes.
No, vinegar is not soluble in kerosene because they are chemically different substances. Vinegar is mostly composed of water and acetic acid, while kerosene is a hydrocarbon mixture. Since water and oil-based substances like kerosene do not mix, vinegar will not dissolve in kerosene.
When cornstarch is mixed with vinegar, it makes a cloudy solution. It cannot dissolve in the vinegar, so it creates a liquid that has cornstarch particles floating in it turning the liquid cloudy.
No. Oil does not dissolve in vinegar just as in water. It is lighter so it forms a layer over vinegar
Clay does not dissolve in vinegar. Clay is a type of soil composed of minerals, while vinegar is an acidic solution primarily made of water and acetic acid. When mixed together, the clay particles remain intact and do not dissolve in the vinegar.
I thought that you could test pills in vinegar to see if they dissolve. That would tell you if they dissolve in your body.
no
the vinegar will dissolve in the water
No
Calcium acetate is reasonably soluble in water, so vinegar will dissolve limestone (calcium carbonate).
A pill dissolves in vinegar due to the chemical reaction between the acid in the vinegar and the components of the pill. The acid breaks down the pill's ingredients, causing it to dissolve and disperse into the liquid.