strong winds
There will be nothing. They are not even Mixing.
Water and glycerine form a single layer on mixing because both are very polar molecules and so they are "compatible" and miscible. Kerosene is very non polar and non compatible with water and so it is not miscible with water and forms two layers.
This is possible only if the ratio of lipid is massive to the ratio of water. However, this is usually not the case. In most cases, when lipids and water are mixed, the hydrophobic properties of the lipids cause the lipids to coalesce at the top of the water without mixing, because that lipids are less dense than water.
Yes it is. Once mixed it can never be altered or undone
Each layer is a phase.
Yes, they can be homogeneously mixed ('one layer' fluid) in each random ratio, but not with water.
The transition layer between the mixed layer at the surface and the deep water layer.
yes it will therre is a special chemical around all playing cards that when mixed with water and heatedd can cause an explosion
At the bottom of the mixed layer, because this is where the mixed layer is seperated from the calm deep water below it.
If hexane is mixed with water, they cannot be mixed completely together. They are both immiscible, so if mixing is attempted, only a two-layer solution will remain.
water and kerosene
There will be nothing. They are not even Mixing.
Mixed Layer Main Thermocline Deep Water Layer
That is just not true. Mixing sulphuric acid and water, for example, can generate enough heat to cause an explosion.
Water and glycerine form a single layer on mixing because both are very polar molecules and so they are "compatible" and miscible. Kerosene is very non polar and non compatible with water and so it is not miscible with water and forms two layers.
This mixing is not a chemical reaction.
By mixing the time of dissolution is reduced.