A solution of sugar in water is homogeneous.
Solution of water and sugar is homogeneous
homogeneous because the water dissolves the sugar
Sugar and water are chemical compounds, homogeneous materials, not mixtures.
Sugar and water are chemical compounds, homogeneous materials, not mixtures.
Sugar water is not heterogeneous because you can't see the components it's made of. The particles are mixed up on an atomic level.
whole wheat bread is a heterogeneous mixture. the rest are homogeneous.
whole wheat bread is a heterogeneous mixture. the rest are homogeneous.
noodle soup tea are heterogeneous
sugar dissolves in water to form a homogeneous solution.
sugar dissolves in water to form a homogeneous solution.
A heterogeneous mixture of sugar and water does not have a limit in the sense that you can mix sugar into water until it reaches saturation. However, once the solution becomes saturated, any additional sugar will not dissolve and will remain as a solid, indicating a limit to the amount of sugar that can be dissolved in a given amount of water at a specific temperature. Thus, while there is a maximum solubility, the mixture can still exist in a heterogeneous state with undissolved sugar present.
heterogeneous mixture because it is dissolved by water