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.
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.
The Greek root 'hetero' means different. Hence heterosexual refering to the love between two members of the opposite sex.
Heterogeneous. It's a combination of two homogenous substances - hydrogen, and oxygen. What you're describing is hydrogen peroxide, by the way.
No, it is not two liquids. It is two types of mixtures.
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.