By itself, a compound is homogeneous, but it is not a mixture.
To be a mixture, two (or more) elements or compounds need to be combined.
And to be a homogeneous mixture, they have to combine in such a way as to not appear separate: no lumps, particles, or layers. This is called being uniform throughout.
A classic example of a homogeneous mixture is salt or sugar which has been dissolved completely in water; most mixed drinks (in which juice, milk, and/or another alcoholic beverage has been dissolved in alcohol) would also qualify.
No. Water is a compound made from hydrogen and oxygen it is homogeneous. Water with dirt suspended in it is heterogeneous.
Salt is a compound of sodium and chlorine. Pure salt is a white crystal that is homogeneous. Sea salt is sold with some contaminants left in it, flecks of other compounds, perhaps sea weed, then it is heterogeneous.
No. A compound is a pure substance composed of atoms bonded together in definite proportions.
No, compounds are homogeneous substances (definite composition). A mixture of compounds, however, can be a heterogeneous mixture (depending on the substances).
No. By definition heterogeneous material is a mixture.
A mixture is composed from two or more compounds.
A compound is not a mixture !
mixture
it's a mixture compound. Kind of a confounded compound mixture.
Mixture
a compound
compound
Is gasoline a element a mixture or a compound
mixture
Water is a compound
It is a mixture.
it's a mixture compound. Kind of a confounded compound mixture.
Mixture
a compound
compound or mixture
soap is a compound
its a heterogeneous mixture
Concrete is a mixture not a compound.
compound