Pure Mercury is homogeneous and is an element, which is a pure substance, and not a mixture.
There is little chance that you will encounter pure Mercury because it exists only in textbooks. In reality, there are always other impurities mixed and dissolved in the mercury.
The liquid mercury obtained from chemical suppliers claims to be at least 99.99% pure. This would be a pure substance, not a mixture, only if it were 100% pure. "Close to pure" is not pure. "Pure" only exists in textbooks.
Mercury is an element, not a mixture at all!
Mercury is a chemical element not a mixture.
Oh, dude, Mercury is definitely a homogeneous mixture. It's all the same stuff throughout, like when you mix sugar in your coffee and it dissolves completely. So yeah, Mercury is like that cool kid who always blends in perfectly wherever it goes.
This mixture is not homogeneous.
Yes, amalgams are homogeneous.Amalgam [note correct spelling] is usually a homogenous mixture. An amalgam is a solid alloy of mercury, the only metal element that is liquid at standard temperature and pressure, with some other metal.
No, it isn't. Both are homogeneous mixtures, but .... :Air is a mixture of gases, mainly of nitrogen, oxygen, carbondioxide and water vapor.Amalgam is (homogeneous) mixture of metals, of which essentially one is mercury (Hg)
homogeneous
Gelatin is a homogeneous mixture.
The mixture of water and salt is a homogeneous mixture. This is an example using the phrase homogeneous mixture.
Homogeneous mixture-uniform mixture of the element
A popsickle is a homogeneous mixture.
Air is a homogeneous mixture.