Two completely miscible liquids form a homegeneous solution.
It is an alloy: a homogenous mixture of two (or more) metals. An 'single-phase solid-in-solid'-mixture.
homogenous mixtures? miscible liquids? Shayna; Solution?
Yes, two liquids with different particles can still form a homogeneous mixture if the particles are small enough to mix evenly throughout each other. This means that they would appear as one phase and have a uniform composition.
White vinegar is a homogenous mixture of water and acetic acid.The two liquids are perfectly mixed; you cannot tell that the liquid is made of two components.Distilled white vinegar is a solution. All solutions are homogenous mixtures because they are the same throughout.
Two ways liquids vaporize are evaporation, in which molecules escape the liquid's surface and become a gas, and boiling, in which the entire liquid reaches its boiling point and turns into a gas.
Hetero as a prefix is derived from combinant form of Greek heteros "the other (of two), another, different;" first element meaning "one, at one, together"
It is an alloy: a homogenous mixture of two (or more) metals. An 'single-phase solid-in-solid'-mixture.
No, it is not two liquids. It is two types of mixtures.
Heterogeneous. It's a combination of two homogenous substances - hydrogen, and oxygen. What you're describing is hydrogen peroxide, by the way.
The Greek root 'hetero' means different. Hence heterosexual refering to the love between two members of the opposite sex.
A solution can exist as a solid, liquid, or gas. Examples include alloys (solid solutions), soda (liquid solution), and air (gas solution). Solutions are defined as homogenous mixtures of two or more substances.
A homogenous mixture of two or more substances that are not solutions is a colloid. Colloids have particles that are larger than the particles in a solution, but still do not settle out over time. Examples of colloids include milk and fog.