im in 5th grade so if the following answer is not correct im am terribly sorry but i think it is homogeneous and if your wonder why its because it speads evenly throught the mixture unless you put too much sugar in there
the answer was approved in science class
Sugar water is a homogeneous mixture.
Normal sugar is completely soluble.
Things that "dissolve" in water, i.e. reduce to a distribution of individual molecules or ions, form a homogeneous mixture.
Table sugar, or sucrose, is a disaccharide. This polymer is composed of two simple sugars: glucose and fructose. Sucrose itself is a molecule, and most table sugar is composed of hydrated sucrose crystals. This means that table sugar is a homogeneous mixture of sucrose and water.
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If sugar completely dissolves in the water, yes it is homogeneous. It is a true solution.
yes
Sugar is a molecular solid. A solution of sugar in water is neither ionic or covalent, but rather a homogeneous mixture.
Yes, this solution is homogeneous.
Spring water is not pure water, it has dissolved minerals in it, which makes it a homogeneous mixture.
Homogeneous mixtures have uniform composition and properties throughout and are known as solutions. For e.g, when sugar/salt is dissolved in water it forms a solution in which the sugar/salt and water are uniformly mixed (the sugar is dissolved uniformly in water). e.g.airHeterogenous mixtures are those which aren't uniform in composition and properties throughout e.g. granite which consists of quartz, feldspar and mica and you can identify each of the substances sepaately in the mixture. Heterogeneous mixtures can be suspensions or colloids.NOTE: None of these mixtures are compounds.Homogeneous mixtures contain a single phase, whereas heterogeneous mixtures have many phases. ~IHATEe2020~
A mixture is a combination of two or more substances that retain their own identity. The term homogeneous means that the substances in the mixture are uniformly distributed. (For example, when you are baking a cake, you mix flour, sugar, baking soda, etc., and you put them in a bowl, forming a mixture. Until you stir it up, however, it will not be homogeneous, because the ingredients are not distributed evenly. After you mix it up, it will be a homogeneous mixture with uniform characteristics (cake batter). But at the microscopic level, there are still individual particles of flour, sugar, baking soda, etc. A chemical example of a homogeneous mixture would be a substance that is dissolved in water and uniformly mixed. For example, when you dissolve NaCl (sodium chloride--table salt) in water, it dissolves and (eventually) distributes itself evenly throughout the container. The mixture will contain water molecules, sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-), so it will be a mixture of different substances. But they will be uniformly distributed, so it will be homogeneous.
Sugar water solution is homogeneous but not a compound.
Sugar water solution is homogeneous but not a compound.
homogeneous because the water dissolves the sugar
Sugar (sucrose) dissolves completely in water, making a homogeneous solution.
No its homogeneous . Heterogenous is when you can see to different ingredients. Homogeneous is when you cant tell between one ingredient and another sugar water is mixed so you can not see the sugar it looks like plain water
A solution of sugar in water is homogeneous.
Solution of water and sugar is homogeneous
Sugar and water are chemical compounds, homogeneous materials, not mixtures.
Sugar dissolves in water to form a homogeneous solution.
Sugar and water are chemical compounds, homogeneous materials, not mixtures.
Homogeneous, and it's sugar water not sugarwater
sugar dissolves in water to form a homogeneous mixture