Water and oil mix?
Answer:
No. Because they have different bonds.
Try liquid detergent. That's what it's made for. Breaks the surface tension of water.
Yes, go on.
no, oil is insoluble
Water molecules are polar, and oil molecules are not. They will mix but won't dissolve in each other.
To make the oil miscible in water you will need to add some sort of soap to it. Soap molecules have one end that is polar and one end that is not. It is the link between the two and allows mixture to occur.
The oil always sits on top of the water bc the water has more density so u can nvr get them to stay mixed together.
they do not mix as liquids, however if you use emulsifiers, you can have either
oil in water emulsion: margarine, or
water in oil emulsion: mayonnaise.
it will not mix
Yes. All oils are soluble to some extent, a very little, in water, and water is soluble, to some extent, a very little in oil. Recently an Australian chemist has shown that by rigorous de-aeration of water-oil systems the extent of solubility can be extended.
Aside from that emulsifiers or detergents can be used to get a nearly homogeneous mixture called an emulsion. Emulsions are very common in biological systems and are often used in paints as well.
Try using an ultrasonic cell disrupter like the biologists use to rupture cells in a liquid. The same equipment will give you an emulsion very quickly which should be stable for quite a while without using any emulsifier.
Any simple emusifier will mix oil and water to form emulsion
Emulsifiers and emulsifier salts modify surface tension in the component phase of an emulsion to establish a uniform dispersion or emulsion..
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