Air is a gaseous mixture. There is nitrogen, carbon dioxide, as well as oxygen among many other things that compose air.
Yes. Pure air is a homogenous mixture. Air is a mixture of various kinds of gases. A mixture is said to be homogenous when all its constituents are in phase. Example, a mixture of water & milk is a homogenous mixture, as water & milk both are liquids & are in phase. Same is the case with pure air. All the constituents gases of pure air are in phase with each other. Hence its a homogenous mixture.
Air normally is a homogenous mixture as every type of gas has diffused to equilibrium, resulting in a thoroughly uniform mixture. So if you take air samples from 10 different places, you'll find the same ratios of all of the constituent gases. If you include pollution with the city air, however, you'll normally be including non-gaseous particles as well. Other factors such as dust and pollen being taken into consideration also would result in a heterogenous mixture. Sometimes these factors are obviously unmixed (heterogenous) to the point that you can see different amounts of pollution or pollen.
The type of solution formed when steam from boiling water evaporates into the air is a gaseous solution. As the water vaporizes, it mixes with the air forming a homogenous mixture of water vapor and air molecules.
mixture of particles in the air
No it is not homogenous
Air is a homogeneous mixture.As it contains gases and water vapors in a uniform composition
Air is a homogeneous mixture.As it contains gases and water vapors in a uniform composition
No, it is a vortex that is made out of a gaseous mixture (air)
Air is a homogenous mixture of gases only when NO solid (eg. smoke) or fluid (eg. fog) or both (smog) particles are present; these make it heterogeneous.
It's a homogenous.
It is a homogenous mixture
Air consists of a mixture of gases, mainly nitrogen (about 78%), oxygen (about 21%), and small amounts of other gases such as carbon dioxide, argon, and water vapor. Despite its composition, air does not separate into distinct layers based on the gases it contains, making it a homogenous mixture.