it is a mixture..homogenous and a colloid one....
substance
Only a substance can be categorized as an element, a compound, or a mixture. An ink pen is not a substance, it is an implement.Added:The 'ink' (IN a pen) is definitely a mixture,not an element or pure compound.
Because it is either a suspension or a solution or a mixture of both. No pure substance yet identified will provide all that is needed of an ink.
ink is a mixture mate! im not being sarcastic
ink is a solution
No, it is a mixture; rarely a drug is a pure substance.
Only a substance can be categorized as an element, a compound, or a mixture. An ink pen is not a substance, it is an implement.Added:The 'ink' (IN a pen) is definitely a mixture,not an element or pure compound.
Because it is either a suspension or a solution or a mixture of both. No pure substance yet identified will provide all that is needed of an ink.
Inks are generally mixtures.
ink is a mixture mate! im not being sarcastic
It is a mixture, because everything in it retains their characteristic properties.
Mixture. A compound is a single substance consisting of atoms bound together (for a very simple definition): water (H2O), Ammonia, etc. A mixture is a combination of coumpounds/elements that are physically, not chemicall combined. When you dissolve sugar in water, you have a sugar-water mixture, not a compound since you do not obtain a single substance "sugar-water" with a unique chemical formula.
ink is a mixture of a carrier and a pigment.
mixturemarker ink is a mixture.
The tulco textile ink product emulsifier is a substance that helps to stabilize the mixture of oil and water in the ink. It allows the different components of the ink to stay mixed together, resulting in a consistent and smooth application on fabric.
An element - substance - NOT a mixture.
a mixture is not a substance
The evidence that exists that marker ink is a mixture is that the ink can be separated into black and other color pigments. This can be done on filter paper by dotting the marker just above the edge and adding ethyl alcohol, which drags the pigments separately across the paper.