Where do the bubbles come from in a fizzy drink?!
Where do the bubbles come from in a fizzy drink?
Answers:
The bubbles in fizzy drink are bubbles of carbon dioxide gas.
Carbon dioxide gas is compressed into the bottle and dissolves in the drink.
When you open the lid of a fizzy drink the sound you hear is the carbon dioxide escaping into the air.
When you open a can or bottle of fizzy drink after it has been shaken or dropped the drink can fizz everywhere. That’s because the particles in the fizzy drink will be moving around very quickly. The carbon dioxide bubbles rush to the top of the drink and will try to escape as fast as they can.
Fizzy drink was invented over 200 years ago.
Add an acid like citrus-fruit juice to a carbonate like baking soda or chalk and you get carbon dioxide, calcium chloride and water.
CO2
Club soda..
carbon dioxide
Carbonation.
carbon dioxide
its made from soda whcih has co2 in it causing bubbes
carbon dioxide
It's the carbination or co2.
they can the drinks in a compressed area so that the CO2 is able to enter the soda much easier becaus gasses leave the soda at lower pressures... so when you are opening the can the pressure is let out. thats why if you let the drink sit the bubbles leave because its not as pressured as it used to be when they suck a ton of CO2 into your drink
carbon dioxide
carbonation
Watford!
Carbon Dioxide
Technically, yes, but it's not really the carbon dioxide that makes the drink fizz, it's dirt.
In a perfectly smooth, clean glass, carbon dioxide molecules would evaporate invisibly. Bubbles of carbon dioxide form because microscopic particles of dust etc in the glass enable them to form (the gas itself is dissolved into the liquid).
Bottom of the glass.
Carbonation.
Trapped Carbon Dioxide, so by drinking less fizzy drinks you will contribute to slowing down climate change, and loose weight at the same time, "boom boom"
co2 dude..!