well according to the theory of the father of chemistry which is Jon mcdale says that if u multiply 20 by 2 then - 5 calculate the percentage to the nearest tenth multiply by 100 then it will give u the answer which is homogeneous substances are always pure so yes they are :D ignore wat i said now lol
Not necessarily, Homogeneous means uniform throughout. For instance a piece of gold is homogeneous But so is homogenized milk
Homogeneous substances are mixtures with a uniform composition. Thus, a pure substance, since it has only one type of particle, always has a uniform composition, thus it is homogeneous.
A pure substance cant be a mixture
yes
yes
no
Some people divide matter into pure substances and mixtures. Pure substances are elements and compounds. Mixtures include homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures. Some people divide matter into homogeneous matter and heterogeneous matter. Homogeneous matter includes pure substances and homogeneous mixtures (solutions). Heterogeneous matter is heterogeneous mixtures.
No. Pure substances are homogeneous, never heterogeneous.
Some people divide matter into pure substances and mixtures. Pure substances are elements and compounds. Mixtures include homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures. Some people divide matter into homogeneous matter and heterogeneous matter. Homogeneous matter includes pure substances and homogeneous mixtures (solutions). Heterogeneous matter is heterogeneous mixtures.
solids and liquids (gas and plasma are secondary categories) Historically As defined by Robert Boyle: 1) Elements: could not be broken down into simpler substances 2) Compounds: Could be broken down via physical or chemical process.
The two primary types of homogeneous matter are elements and compounds. Homogeneous matter is a substance that has uniform properties and compositions.
Some people divide matter into pure substances and mixtures. Pure substances are elements and compounds. Mixtures include homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures. Some people divide matter into homogeneous matter and heterogeneous matter. Homogeneous matter includes pure substances and homogeneous mixtures (solutions). Heterogeneous matter is heterogeneous mixtures.
No. Pure substances are homogeneous, never heterogeneous.
Compounds and solutions are pure substances
compounds
Some people divide matter into pure substances and mixtures. Pure substances are elements and compounds. Mixtures include homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures. Some people divide matter into homogeneous matter and heterogeneous matter. Homogeneous matter includes pure substances and homogeneous mixtures (solutions). Heterogeneous matter is heterogeneous mixtures.
The matter can be decomposed into two parts: - the first part is named electrocinematicoxyme or positive matter - the second and last part is named transvakineticase or neutral matter. This was demonstrated by Alibert Montrocq, a French astrophysicist in 1926 and is known as the dual experimentation of Montroq (entered the history with the wrong spelling, too bad for Mr Montrocq).
Mixtures
solids and liquids (gas and plasma are secondary categories) Historically As defined by Robert Boyle: 1) Elements: could not be broken down into simpler substances 2) Compounds: Could be broken down via physical or chemical process.
The two primary types of homogeneous matter are elements and compounds. Homogeneous matter is a substance that has uniform properties and compositions.
mixtures
No, elements are pure substances. However, if you mix two elements together, it depends on how well you mix them. Mixtures of two elements can be completely homogeneous, or extremely heterogeneous.
Silver is not a homogeneous mixture or a heterogeneous mixture, it is a pure element. Silver does appear in homogeneous mixtures and heterogeneous mixtures such as sterling silver and silver nitrate.