A pure compound is made up entirely of one substance that has a single chemical property. A mixture is made up of two or more pure compounds with distinct chemical properties.
The compound is water - H2O; the molecule of hydrogen is H2.
Compounds and mixtures are similar in that they both consist of two or more substances combined together. However, they differ in their composition and properties: a compound is formed when elements chemically bond in fixed ratios, resulting in a substance with distinct properties that differ from its constituent elements. In contrast, a mixture involves physical combinations of substances that retain their individual properties and can vary in composition.
A fixed composition is not a characteristic of a mixture. The composition of a mixture can vary, unlike the composition of a compound that forms a chemical reaction.
Marijuana is a mixture not compound.
Bagel is a mixture not a compound.
A compound has a definite composition, while a mixture's composition can vary.
A mixture of hydrogen and oxygen consists of particles of both elements physically combined, maintaining their individual properties. In contrast, a compound containing hydrogen and oxygen forms chemical bonds to create a distinct substance with unique properties, such as water (H2O).
a substance
Yes, in a mixture, the substances are physically combined and can be present in any proportion. This allows the composition to vary, unlike a compound where the elements are chemically combined in fixed ratios.
One of the characteristics of a compound is that it has a fixed chemical composition.
It is normal; each compound has specific properties.
When you change the composition of a mixture, you are altering the relative amounts of the substances mixed together, while their chemical properties remain the same. In contrast, changing the composition of a compound involves altering the elements that make up the compound, leading to the formation of a new substance with different chemical properties.