Corn oil is homogeneous, if it's been commercially processed.
If the sugar does not dissolve it the oil, then it is not
water is pure so is homogeneous ice is pure so is homogeneous oil is pure so is homogeneous
Off the shelf vegetable oil is usually made up of several separate oil compounds and thus it is a homogeneous mixture. However, if it was a chemically pure oil containing just one oil compound it would not be a homogeneous mixture.
Crude oil is not completely homogenous as it is a mixture of various hydrocarbons and other compounds that can vary in composition. However, it is generally considered to be homogeneous for practical purposes in the oil industry.
Motor oil is a homogeneous mixture composed of various compounds such as base oils and additives. It is not a single compound but a combination of different substances that are uniformly distributed throughout the oil.
It can be either. It is very often soybean oil, but can be a mixture of several. That is if it is labeled just cooking oil. If it is corn, canola, olive or some stated type, it should only be that kind.
One could say that water, if it comes directly out of the tap, or has minerals added for bottled water, that it is a homogeneous mixture. However, pure water is a pure substance, not a mixture. Italian dressing has at least two obvious components: vinegar on the bottom and oil on top, which is why it needs to be shaken. Mouthwash is definitely a homogeneous mixture of the substances listed in its ingredients.
Cooking oil is a homogeneous mixture because it is a uniform combination of different types of oil molecules that are evenly distributed throughout the mixture.
It can be either. It is very often soybean oil, but can be a mixture of several. That is if it is labeled just cooking oil. If it is corn, canola, olive or some stated type, it should only be that kind.
Mineral oil is a homogeneous mixture, meaning its components are uniformly distributed throughout the sample. It is a clear, colorless liquid that consists primarily of alkanes and cycloalkanes.
The motor oil is a homogeneous mixture even though it is not colorless. I can see an object through a thin layer of oil.
No, crude oil and water are immiscible and do not form a homogeneous mixture. They will separate into distinct layers due to their differences in polarity and density.