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Q: Is baking soda and pure substance homogeneous mixture or heterogeneous mixture?
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Is baking powder a homogeneous mixture or heterogeneous mixture?

heterogenous


Is baking soda Element compound homogeneous mixture or heterogeneous mixture?

heterogeneous


Is baking soda a compound heterogeneous mixtures or a homogeneous mixture?

its a heterogeneous mixtures


Is baking soda an example of homogeneous or heterogeneous mixture?

Baking soda, NaHCO3 - the correct systematic name is sodium hydrogen carbonate, is a chemical compound.


How could you turn a heterogeneous mixture of salt an sugar and baking soda into a homogeneous mixture?

add water so they dissolve


Is baking soda a homogenous mixture or heterogeneous mixture?

Is cherry vanilla ice cream homogenous or heterogeneous


Is baking soda ad water homogeneous or heterogeneous?

It's a homogenous mixture, because it looks the same through out, meaning you can't see the difference, it's all white. It's a mixture because it's made of different compounds, baking soda and some kind(s) of acidifying salt.


Baking soda heterogeneous?

Its a pure substance


Is baking mix a homogeneous mixture or heterogeneous mixture?

No, because the heat used to make it cannot be easily identified, and if you didn't already know the beans were cooked, you wouldn't know at all


Is baking soda heterogeneous or homogenous?

Baking soda is actually a chemical compound ...while heterogeneous and homogeneous can only be mixtures chemical formula is NaHCO3.


Is baking soda a mixture or a substance?

Mixture


An example of a homogeneous mixture is?

A mixture is a combination of two or more substances that retain their own identity. The term homogeneous means that the substances in the mixture are uniformly distributed. (For example, when you are baking a cake, you mix flour, sugar, baking soda, etc., and you put them in a bowl, forming a mixture. Until you stir it up, however, it will not be homogeneous, because the ingredients are not distributed evenly. After you mix it up, it will be a homogeneous mixture with uniform characteristics (cake batter). But at the microscopic level, there are still individual particles of flour, sugar, baking soda, etc. A chemical example of a homogeneous mixture would be a substance that is dissolved in water and uniformly mixed. For example, when you dissolve NaCl (sodium chloride--table salt) in water, it dissolves and (eventually) distributes itself evenly throughout the container. The mixture will contain water molecules, sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-), so it will be a mixture of different substances. But they will be uniformly distributed, so it will be homogeneous.