Your question is too vague. Anything will dissolve in acid if it is the right acid. You need to specify which acid you're thinking about to get a specific list.
Hydrofluoric acid (HF) will dissolve glass, but it is one of the most dangerous chemicals to work with. It absorbs through the skin undetected and will decalcify bones.
Silver sulphide dissolves in strong acids like sulphuric acid and nitric acid. It however does not dissolve in hydrochloric acid.
In order to dissolve chalk in water, vinegar needs to be added. The vinegar has acid in it that eats away at the chalk to dissolve it.
you cant you cant
A liquid that can dissolve things is a solvent. The thing being dissolved is a solute.
vinegar dissolves things because it is an acid
The hydrochloric acid burned my skin, or the hydrochloric acid can burn things if it touches or can have certain things dissolve or melt, like ice.
Among other things, it tends to dissolve things; that's what your body uses it for (in your stomach).
Potato chips, made of starch and fat, will not dissolve in acid like hydrochloric acid. The acid can soften the chip, but it will not fully dissolve it.
Yes, playdough can dissolve with certain chemicals, Like: Hydrofluoric acid that can burn through many things especially skin.
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.
Yes, hydrochloric acid can dissolve gold.
Yes, muriatic acid can dissolve concrete.
Yes, gold does not dissolve in hydrochloric acid.
Yes, hydrochloric acid can dissolve gold.
No, sulfuric acid cannot dissolve gold. Aqua regia, a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, is typically used to dissolve gold.
The boric acid did not dissolve because it is a weak acid that has low solubility in water.