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A student sees tiny bubbles clinging to the inside of an unopened plastic bottle full of carbonated soft drink. the student squeezes the bottle.

Respuesta :

Answer: The bubbles will shrink , some may vanish.

Explanation:

The bubbles will shrink, and some may vanish observed during the experiment.

Why bubbles are formed in carbonated water?

The bubbles are made from a gas called carbon dioxide. The soda  company puts the carbon dioxide in the soda to give it that special fizz. You can see some of this , bubble, in this activity with soda water.

The bubbles are formed because the carbonic acid of the soft drink decomposes and forms carbon dioxide gas, which has low solubility in liquids. The decomposition reaction is a reversible reaction:

H₂CO₃(l) ⇄ CO₂(g) + H₂O

When the bottle is shaken, the molecules of the drink became more agitated, so the pressure of it will increase. The increase of pressure in a reversible reaction shifts the equilibrium of the formation of the less gas molecules. So, the CO₂ will dissolve in liquid, and less bubbles will be seen.

Learn more about carbonated water here:

https://brainly.com/question/12022336

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