Yes -- salt and vinegar react to form sodium acetate and hydrochloric acid.
NaCl + CH3COOH --> NaCH3COO + HCl
Chat with our AI personalities
You'd have a salt reaction with the clay body and depending on firing temp achieve a salt fired piece...
Combining salt and ice will make very cold, salty water, which is quite uncomfortable if you get it on your skin. This could be described as a burning cold. Actually, the answer is yes. The chemical reaction from the salt melting the ice will cause a rash to appear on your skin. If you put salt on your hand then place an ice cube on the salt, the resulting chemical reaction will burn you.
Yes. The vinegar "sets" the color to prevent fading. Use a teaspoon of salt also. However, according to an article at http://www.pburch.net/dyeing/dyelog/B1063361308/C1605100905/E20080723120359/ vinegar is not recommended where the tie dye shirt is cotton.
"No as the vinegar and baking soda combined weight is too heavy - helium lighter than air therefore it goes up/floats" Hello - the above prior answer is correct if you mean attaching vinegar and baking soda as a payload. If you mean just capturing the gas from the reaction, the above answer ends up correct anyway, as the gaseous product of the reaction is CO2 (carbon dioxide). CO2 is about 50% heavier than air (mostly Nitrogen), so a balloon filled with CO2 will still sink. ---MexicoDoug
I have a copper sink and clean it one a week with Table Salt and Vinegar. Come up like new