sugar itself is not a mixture, now dissolved in water is homogeneous, increasing quantity can lead to hetergeneous mixture because of precipitate
A cup of coffee with added table sugar is considered a homogeneous mixture. In this mixture, the sugar dissolves completely in the coffee, resulting in a uniform composition where the individual components (coffee and sugar) are not distinguishable. This consistency throughout the beverage makes it homogeneous rather than heterogeneous.
Table sugar is a compound.
The coffee with added table sugar would be considered a mixture. The table sugar dissolves in the coffee, creating a homogeneous mixture where the sugar molecules are evenly distributed throughout the coffee.
Table sugar, which most likely is sucrose, is a compound.
Table sugar is not a mechanical mixture but a compound. Table sugar is composed of two or more elements so it can be categorized as compound mixture as the formula C12H22O11 describes it as a compound.
Yes, you can separate a mixture of table sugar and water through a process called evaporation. By heating the mixture, the water will evaporate, leaving behind the sugar in its solid form.
Table sugar (sucrose) is a chemical compound not a mixture.
Sugar is a name for a class of carbohydrate of which there are many; frusctose, maltose, glucose etc. Common table sugar is a dissaccharide (compound) of two sugars, glucose and fructose and is chemically called sucrose.
Yes, Heterogeneous Additional information: The sugar is dissolved in the water. This "mixture" consists of two different types of molecules (thus we call it a mixture): water molecules (H2O) and sugar molecules (one type of sugar is table sugar, C12H22O11)
Table sugar is a compound.
Powdered sugar is not a mixture, but a homogenous quantity of a singular molecular compound. It would only be a mixture if it contained other ingredients, for example.
Yes