^pretty on point Dish soap is made to create micelles, basically a bubble around the oil, and once the oil is surrounded by the micelle, the micelle itself can dissolve better than just oil alone But it’s still not technically dissolved, just suspended in water, given enough time, the oil and water will return to their natural separation
A surfactant (has both hydrophilic and hydrophobic end) was added which is the soap, to break the surface tension of the water, so that the oil can be miscible with the water to form the emulsion... That's the chemistry behind it chess
If you mix the solution, oil and water, in a vacuum chamber, and then bring it back to our regular atmospheric pressure, the micture will emulsify without a surfactant. The water, in a vacuum chamber, turns into a *surfactant* which can bind/mix with oil, when the oxygen is completely removed by the changing pressure. When the oil and water mix under a vacuum, and then is brought back to our ordinary atmospheric pressure, it can be seen as a cloudy mixture which doesnt seperate like before. I imagine this is a potential for good soup in the future lol, since there is no need to add soap or anything.
Yes I understand, can you suggest a method to dilute silicone oil? Iam trying to avoid aromatic hydrocarbons as a diluting agents. The goal is to use to protect rubber parts, but the silicone oil is too viscous. Trying to dilute it to make it sprayable or easier to apply.
@@kousikv2247Hi, in response to your question, firstly you mentioned that the silicone oil is viscous, and you know that viscosity varies with temperature, so you have to subject the viscous silicone oil to heat by raising the temperature to increase the Fluidity and reduce the viscosity, so that you can spray
Also if you use any organic aromatic solvent, after spraying, it will volatilize, but reduce the viscosity of the silicone oil by raising the temperature...Chess
dishwashing liquid turns water into a non-polar molecule, which allows it to mix with oil.
Storic nj
Not quite. The soap is amphipathic and can bind to both the non-polar and polar substances and act as a mediary between the two
^pretty on point
Dish soap is made to create micelles, basically a bubble around the oil, and once the oil is surrounded by the micelle, the micelle itself can dissolve better than just oil alone
But it’s still not technically dissolved, just suspended in water, given enough time, the oil and water will return to their natural separation
@@Back_To_Pray oh so my biology teacher lied
@@Back_To_Pray not sarcasm I think he just lied to teach a lesson easier
Here , emulsion of water and oil occur due to vim liquid is source of emulsifiers
A surfactant (has both hydrophilic and hydrophobic end) was added which is the soap, to break the surface tension of the water, so that the oil can be miscible with the water to form the emulsion... That's the chemistry behind it chess
If you mix the solution, oil and water, in a vacuum chamber, and then bring it back to our regular atmospheric pressure, the micture will emulsify without a surfactant.
The water, in a vacuum chamber, turns into a *surfactant* which can bind/mix with oil, when the oxygen is completely removed by the changing pressure.
When the oil and water mix under a vacuum, and then is brought back to our ordinary atmospheric pressure, it can be seen as a cloudy mixture which doesnt seperate like before. I imagine this is a potential for good soup in the future lol, since there is no need to add soap or anything.
Hydrophilic surfactant use o/w
yeah man… seems really easy💀
soup?
Vim dissolve the boundaries of oil to conect oil
Vim? Really?
You can also use naoh
Shoap
Hii ,, which is the solubiliser for essential oil and oil, can we use vim liquid to mix essential oil in water
Can someone PLEASE make an edible version!
It means you add soup also so it mixed but
If you mixed only oil and water so it will not dissolve
Can silicone oil be diluted like this?
actually dish wash creates wall arround small droplets of oil
that's why it seems like dissolved
Yes I understand, can you suggest a method to dilute silicone oil? Iam trying to avoid aromatic hydrocarbons as a diluting agents. The goal is to use to protect rubber parts, but the silicone oil is too viscous. Trying to dilute it to make it sprayable or easier to apply.
@@kousikv2247Hi, in response to your question, firstly you mentioned that the silicone oil is viscous, and you know that viscosity varies with temperature, so you have to subject the viscous silicone oil to heat by raising the temperature to increase the Fluidity and reduce the viscosity, so that you can spray
Also if you use any organic aromatic solvent, after spraying, it will volatilize, but reduce the viscosity of the silicone oil by raising the temperature...Chess
was that a roach?
yes.
That’s a nice infested house right there
😮
Is the solution stable or not?
does it matter how much oil you put and how much soap you put? is there a ratio to follow from water, oil and dishwashing soap?
Emulsifier
Any easy to find edible versions?
I have some cannabis oil that I need separated from water but still be edible. Any ideas?
Freez it
Not you uploaded the take with the roach in it
so um when do u start throwing eggs
😮 you are wrong it can't mix
You can’t even see what they used with the oils and water. Looks like that was done on purpose. 🙄
👍👍👌👌
Thats saponification
Saponification
ha ha😂😂 washing liquid soap
are bhai washing powder daal do 😂🪐
Nice
He used surfactant to dissolve oil and water
What kind of surfactant and how
Much?
@@atarbuck3452it’s just dishwashing liquid.
😮
Forbidden mayo
These is fakebecause it took the colour of vim but the is floating
Wow. You have created pineapple juice without pineapple. Now drnk that shit😅
Do we need roaches for this?
yes
Fake
Fek
Feke
stupid idea :) lolz
Its Called Science lolz
Which Oil he mixes with VIM dishes Cleaner!! OMG.
VIM for Oil Removal - not for mixture... LOLZZZZ
@@TaherT Then you don't understand the chemistry behind it. Lol..
Damn bro its literally basic 9th class science... that vim liquid is an emulsifier or EA
The underage chemistry of @@notveryrea1
Nice