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Oil and vinegar dressing is a heterogeneous mixture.
Vinegar is a mixture that contains a solution of acetic acid., Depending on the type of vinegar there may be solids suspended e.g. in balsamic vinegar.
Vinegar is a homogeneous solution mixture.Only one phase exist here.
No. Salad dressing is a heterogeneous mixture of oil, vinegar, and various other ingredients.
Heterogeneous materials can be separated as they are made from separate components. Oil and vinegar salad dressing is an example of heterogeous product.
Salad dressings are heterogeneous mixtures of oil, vinegar, and various other ingredients.
It is a heterogeneous, because it will separate. The proportion of the components is not consistent through out.
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)
Cider vinegar is a homogeneous mixture. This is because it contains a small percentage of water. Pure vinegar is a compound.
Salt (NaCl, sodium chloride) is a compound; vinegar is a mixture, a homogeneous solution of acetic acid in water.
It depends on the components. If it's a mixture of oil and vinegar then it would be considered a heterogeneous, because the components aren't proportioned. Vinegar is more dense than oil so it will stay at the bottom. But, if it's a mixture like salt and water, then it would be considered a homogeneous because the mixture is a solution.
Oil and vinegar salad dressing is only homogeneous for a brief time when you shake it. The purpose of shaking it is to make it homogeneous before you pour it. After a few minutes of sitting still, it will return to a heterogeneous state.