no it's a heterogeneous mixture
No. Salad dressing is a heterogeneous mixture of oil, vinegar, and various other ingredients.
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.
Is salad dressing a heterogeneous or homogeneous mixture
Rule of thumb to use, is if it can settle to the bottom of if it or you have to shake it; it is deffinitly heterogeneous.
Salad dressing is a heterogeneous mixture.
yes
A mixture
No, Italian dressing is not a true solution. It is a mixture of oil, vinegar, herbs, and spices that do not dissolve or chemically combine to form a homogeneous solution. The ingredients in Italian dressing remain visibly separate.
Salad dressing is a heterogeneous mixture.
Italian dressing is typically a heterogeneous mixture. This is because it often contains oil, vinegar, herbs, and spices that do not fully blend together, resulting in visible separation of the ingredients. When left standing, you can see distinct layers or particles, indicating that the components do not form a uniform composition.
Italian salad dressing is a mixture because it is made by combining multiple ingredients such as oil, vinegar, herbs, and spices.
Nope. Its not a homogenous mixture. Homogenous mixtures are uniform throughout, and the parts do not separate from each other. Have you ever looked at Italian dressing (which has vinega and oil in it) after you let it sit in your fridge for any length of time? You can see the oil separate from the rest of the dressing.