Yes
Pure matter substances can be elements, compounds, or mixtures where all components are the same throughout. Examples include pure water (H2O), pure iron (Fe), and pure table salt (NaCl).
No, Iron is a homogeneous mixture as long as the iron is pure
ok so some examples of pure substances are gold sugar table salt distilled water(pure) iron filings
none,because nickel is element and elements are pure substances like iron,oxygen,gold,etc.*note:pure substance has no other substance or substances mix on it
No because iron reacts with various substances including oxygen in the air to produce rust.
Pure iron that has not been bonded with other substances such as aluminum or silicon. The presence of these substances keeps the magnetic dipoles (electrons, each of which acts like a tiny magnet due to its spin) aligned once magnetized and therefore the material remains magnetized. This does not occur in pure iron.
Steel is not a pure element, as it is an alloy composed primarily of iron with small amounts of carbon and other elements.
A pure substance is a material that contains only one type of element or compound. Gold and iron are examples of pure substances because they consist of only gold atoms and iron atoms, respectively, without any other impurities.
No, Salt is a compound of Sodium and Chlorine. A pure substance consists of only one type of element.
Iron is an element; it cannot be broken down into smaller atoms. Every atom in iron is a iron atom so it is homogenous.
Iron is an element, so it is a pure substance.
The name of pure iron is just "iron." When iron is in its pure form, it consists of iron atoms without any other elements or impurities mixed in.