Use a magnet to remove the iron, then distill the water, leaving the salt behind as the water is condensed into another container.
Salt is water soluble, so it can be rinsed out. Pepper could probably be centrifuged out. It might even float.
Distilled water is usually a pure substance. Occasionally it contains a very small amount of chloride ions, and then it is an homogeneous mixture.
Atoms
Salt water is definitely a mixture, a mixture of water and salt. It's not a pure substance because it's conformed of two components that aren't noticeable to the naked eye, but that can be easily separated.
A homogenous mixture is one containing a number of particles of the same substance, while a heterogenous mixture contains particles of different substances. For example, a handful of sand would probably be considered a homogenous mixture because it only contains sand particles, while a handful of mud would be a heterogenous mixture because it contains particles of dirt, water, sand, rocks, etc.
Mud would be a homogeneous mixture it was made of consistently sized particles of dirt mixed with water. However, most mud contains rocks and other matter too that would make most mud considered a heterogeneous solution.
Homogeneous mixture contains substances that are completely mixed. It does not contain substances which cannot be mixed.
A homogeneous mixture contains two or more substances evenly distributed at the molecular level. This means that the components are uniformly mixed and not easily distinguishable from one another. Homogeneous mixtures can be in the form of gases, liquids, or solids.
homogeneous mixture
no homogeneous substances is not uniform as it contains mixture of many substances and therefore all particles cannot remain in fixed ratio.
homogeneous mixture
Heterogeneous because it contains many different substances and is not always the same in composition.
That would be Homogeneous
No. Many mixtures of two or more subtances are homogeneous. Homogeneous just means that the mixture is uniform throughout. Salt, sugar, and many other substances dissolve in water to form homogeneous mixtures. Air is also classified as a homogeneous mixtue (made up of different gases that are uniformly distributed).
Vanilla extract is a homogeneous mixture because it consists of a single phase with the individual components, like water, alcohol, and vanilla flavor compounds, uniformly distributed throughout.
Garlic mixed with vinegar forms a homogeneous mixture, as both ingredients are in the same phase and fully dissolved. The mixture appears as a single phase with no visible separation between the garlic and vinegar components.
Yes, a homogeneous mixture is uniform throughout, meaning that the components are evenly distributed at a molecular level. This results in a consistent composition and appearance in all parts of the mixture.
A mixture which only contains substances which are in the same phases/state. eg, a gaseous mixture or a mixture of two aqueous solutions.