homogeneous
No, saltwater is not considered a type of heterogeneous mixture. It is considered a type of homogeneous mixture since the salt dissolves into the water.
To make salt water a heterogeneous mixture, you could add an immiscible substance such as oil or sand to the water with salt. This would create two distinct phases that do not mix evenly, resulting in a heterogeneous mixture.
salt water is homogeneous if the salt is completely dissolved. however if the salt appears to be unmixed then it is heterogeneous (E.G: if the salt crystals are large)
compound solution because the salt is dissolved in the water :)
Salt water is a homogeneous mixture.
Salt water is a homogeneous solution as far as the salt is solubilized
I think that it is a Mixture because it is salt + water evenly mixed together.
Yes
Salt water is a homogeneous solution as far as the salt is solubilized
Soil is the most heterogeneous. Air is also heterogeneous on a large scale: air near the sea usually contains more ozone than elsewhere, There is also an ozone layer in the upper atmosphere. Salt water is heterogeneous in the polar regions where melting ice contains less salt than other water.
Sand and salt are heterogeneous because you can clearly see the particles and you can't see through them no matter the density.
Yes. By definition, it is made up of two or more compounds, therefore heterogeneous. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The sodium chloride solution is homogeneous.