Salt (sodium chloride) is a compound (NaCl) not a mixture.
Neither. It is a pure substance.
NaCl is a compound known as the table salt.
Not, its a homogeneous solution (a mixture).
Salt (NaCl, sodium chloride) is a compound; vinegar is a mixture, a homogeneous solution of acetic acid in water.
Salt is a homogeneous mixture, not a heterogeneous mixture. This is because salt consists of sodium chloride (NaCl) molecules that are uniformly distributed throughout the mixture, giving it a consistent composition, properties, and appearance.
This mixture is not homogeneous.
Yes, common salt (sodium chloride) is a homogeneous mixture because its composition is uniform throughout. When you dissolve salt in water, the salt ions are evenly distributed, resulting in a homogeneous solution.
A solution is a homogeneous mixture.
If you mean salt & pepper in the same container, I would say heterogeneous mixture, but salt by itself would be a compount (NaCl?), while pepper would likely be a homogeneous mixture (milled black pepper).
Yes. When NaCl is added to water, it forms a solution, which is a homogeneous mixture.
It is a homogeneous mixture.
NaCl (sodium chloride) is a compound, not a mixture.