Of course, especially liquids and gases, but even solids, especially at
high temperature
No, the particles of a solid will not mix by diffusion. Diffusion occurs when particles move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration, but in a solid, the particles are fixed in place and cannot move around to mix with each other.
Yes, two gases can mix together when they are in the same container due to diffusion. Diffusion is the movement of gas molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration, allowing the gases to spread out and mix evenly.
When two substances mix without being shaken or stirred, it is likely due to the process of diffusion. Diffusion is the movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration, leading to the even distribution of the substances.
This process is called gas diffusion.
Yes, effusion and diffusion are two ways that gases mix. Effusion is the process where gases move through a small opening, while diffusion is the process where gases mix by moving from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration. Both processes play a role in the overall mixing of gases.
These are two different processes. Diffusion is when two substance mix together, evaporation is when a liquid turns into a gas. If diffusion where to effect evaporation it would be to do with changing the properties of the liquid being evaporated.
Diffusion is when the molecules of spread out to where there is less of it until it's equal. Think and watch of what happens the next time you make lemonade with powdered mix.
One important part of the particle theory for diffusion is that particles are in constant random motion. This motion allows particles to spread out and mix with other particles in a process known as diffusion.
The ability of gas to completely spread out and mix with other substances is called diffusion. This process occurs due to random motion of gas particles leading to them mixing evenly in the available space.
Well diffusion is when, say an aerosal can is sprayed into the atmosphere, taking it quite a while for you to smell it than the person closer to the can. the particles (which happen to smell in an aerosal can) mix with the particles in the air and cause diffusion. Hope I helped! :)
No, pouring frozen lemonade into cold water is not an example of diffusion. Diffusion is the movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. In this scenario, the frozen lemonade will melt and mix with the cold water through the process of dissolution, where the molecules of the lemonade mix with the molecules of the water to create a homogeneous solution.
No it will not cause coalescence. Water separates from oil they do not mix or combine