Yes a bottle of table vinegar would be classed as homogeneous.
Homogeneous mixtures contain a relatively consistent mixing of their compounds. Examples of Homogenous mixtures include:A solution of sugar in water - this is a solid in liquid solution. (Sugar is the solute and water is the solvent.)Carbonated drinks like soda or root beer -. these are gas in liquid solutions. (They contain carbon dioxide gas as the solute and water as solvent.)Air, which is a mixture of gas in Earth's atmosphere. Air is a homogenous mixture of a number of gases. Its two main constituents are oxygen (about 21%) and nitrogen (about 78%), with other gases present in smaller quantities.Vinegar is also a homogeneous mixture of acetic acid in water. a bottle of table vinegara very good example of a homogeneous mixture is salt and a solution of water.A bottle of table vinegar
The mixture is heterogeneous.
A COMPOUND is 1 thing. If you were asking is a bottle of oil a compound then yes it is. Since all the oil molecules are the same in that bottle, it would be a compound. Since vinegar and oil are obviously not the same thing due to the fact that they have different names as well as different compositions. Vinegar and oil is obviously a mixture of two different things. Technically, i am not 100% positive, vinegar i believe is generally a mix of water and some sort of acid. This would mean vinegar itself is a mixture as well.
cranberry juice is a homogeneous mixture. I repeat, it is not homogeneous and cannot be; just look after stirring a transparent bottle. The residue is inevitable.
If you mix water and vinegar (acetic acid) it forms a homogeneous solution (mixture). Shaking it and letting it stand for 5 minutes will not change the appearance or the composition of the solution. So, basically noting happens.
table vinegar it is dilute acetic acid
bottle of table vinegar as it is dilute acetic acid
a bottle of table vinegar
a bottle of table vinegar
The orange juice is not a homogeneous mixture.
A glass of orange juices
No, the hydrogen and oxygen elements in water are combined in molecules and so are a compound rather than a mixture. Air is a good example of a homogeneous mixture of mainly nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water vapor and hence it has different types of molecules thoroughly mixed together rather than chemically combined. Salty water is another good example.
Homogeneous mixtures contain a relatively consistent mixing of their compounds. Examples of Homogenous mixtures include:A solution of sugar in water - this is a solid in liquid solution. (Sugar is the solute and water is the solvent.)Carbonated drinks like soda or root beer -. these are gas in liquid solutions. (They contain carbon dioxide gas as the solute and water as solvent.)Air, which is a mixture of gas in Earth's atmosphere. Air is a homogenous mixture of a number of gases. Its two main constituents are oxygen (about 21%) and nitrogen (about 78%), with other gases present in smaller quantities.Vinegar is also a homogeneous mixture of acetic acid in water. a bottle of table vinegara very good example of a homogeneous mixture is salt and a solution of water.A bottle of table vinegar
The mixture is heterogeneous.
Spring water is not pure water, it has dissolved minerals in it, which makes it a homogeneous mixture.
A COMPOUND is 1 thing. If you were asking is a bottle of oil a compound then yes it is. Since all the oil molecules are the same in that bottle, it would be a compound. Since vinegar and oil are obviously not the same thing due to the fact that they have different names as well as different compositions. Vinegar and oil is obviously a mixture of two different things. Technically, i am not 100% positive, vinegar i believe is generally a mix of water and some sort of acid. This would mean vinegar itself is a mixture as well.
cranberry juice is a homogeneous mixture. I repeat, it is not homogeneous and cannot be; just look after stirring a transparent bottle. The residue is inevitable.