I've tried this recently, Jet Alert 99% caf & baking soda, snorting it will almost stop your heart & collapse your lungs. You gasp for air but no one is there to help you. Only way to snap out of it is cold bath water with a oxygen machine feeding you air. I'm only 24, I wouldn't recommend this to anyone unless you hit rock bottom and want to die slowly.
No, not all liquids will react with baking soda. Baking soda reacts with acidic substances to produce carbon dioxide gas, which creates bubbles and causes the mixture to expand. Liquids that are not acidic may not react with baking soda in this way.
Yes
At the temperature of the cooking, NaHCO3 (baking soda) is transformed in Na2CO3; this compound (sodium carbonate) react with the acetic acid from vinegar.
Liquid
The alkaloid reaction is greatest because the sodium by carbonate reactect with the acidic property's of the caffeine… but if you boil it down it makes a crack cokaine substance :)
Baking soda does not react with fiberglass. Fiberglass is a type of material made from woven glass fibers, while baking soda is a chemical compound. They do not have a chemical reaction when in contact with each other.
yes it does
Baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) actually does react with water, but the reaction is relatively slow at room temperature. When mixed with water, baking soda dissociates to form bicarbonate ions and hydrogen ions. This reaction helps give baking soda its leavening and cleaning properties.
baking soda+vinegar=acidetic baking soda Is aprocess in with they react to one another in different ways. peaceout
If you add more baking soda to a vinegar (acetic acid) and baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) mix there will only be a further reaction if there is more acetic acid available to react with the baking soda. If the acid was used up by the first amount of baking soda no further reaction can occur.
because baking soda is a base, it will react with an acid. A common household acid is vinegar, and it works the best.
Vinegar and baking soda react to form carbon dioxide (a gas), water (a liquid), and sodium acetate which is solid in is pure form, but when formed by the vinegar-baking soda reaction is dissolved in water.