Yes. More specifically, it is a solution.
Acetic acid is considered a homogeneous mixture when it is in its pure form, as it consists of a single type of molecule throughout. However, when mixed with other substances, such as water, it can form a homogeneous solution. In contrast, if it is mixed with substances that do not dissolve, such as oil, it would be heterogeneous. Overall, acetic acid itself is homogeneous.
Yes, acetic acid is miscible in water. This means that acetic acid can fully dissolve in water to form a homogeneous solution.
No, it is a homogeneous mixture of water and acetic acid.
In a liquid-liquid solution of acetic acid in water, acetic acid is the solute and water is the solvent. Acetic acid dissolves in water, forming a homogeneous mixture where water is the majority component and acetic acid is the minority component.
Vinegar is mainly diluted acetic acid. For a much longer and more complete explanation, see the question "What is vinegar?".
homogeneous mixture, also known as a solution
That depends on what kind of vinegar you are asking about. Pure vinegar is a compound composed of Vinegar is acetic acid (HC2H3O2) but the vinegar you buy in a store is a homogeneous mixture of acetic acid and water.
Vinegar is a homogeneous mixture of water and acetic acid.
Yes. They are both alkanes and completely soluble in each other. They would form a homogeneous mixture.
House hold vineger is dilute acetic acid.So it is a mixture of water and acetic acid.Alone it can be considered as a compound.
yes it never settles it is homogeneous! Vinegar is a solution of water and acetic acid. It is often diluted to a specific acidity (5% is very common)
Glacial acetic acid is slightly soluble in ether. It can form a homogeneous solution with ether under certain conditions, but it is not very miscible compared to other solvents like water or alcohols. Generally, other solvents such as alcohols or chloroform are preferred for dissolving glacial acetic acid.