No. Copper used in wiring would not qualify as laboratory-grade (pure). It would be far too expensive to manufacture and would not improve the conductivity enough to make a difference.
Copper wire is a pure substance, as it is made entirely of copper atoms.
copper is an ELEMENT therefore it is not a heterogeneous OR homogeneous mixture.
It should be a "pure" substance, but its really an alloy.
It should be a "pure" substance, but its really an alloy.
No. Copper used in wiring would not qualify as laboratory-grade (pure). It would be far too expensive to manufacture and would not improve the conductivity enough to make a difference. Some copper wire is even plated. Laboratory-grade (pure) copper is a single substance, the element copper.
Copper wire is made of the element copper. Copper is a pure substance, not a compound, because it is made up of only one type of atom.
Copper is a pure substance.
Yes, copper is an element, which is a pure substance.
Copper used in wiring would not qualify as laboratory-grade (pure). It would be too expensive to manufacture.
Copper metal is an element and thus a pure substance.
Copper metal is an element and thus a pure substance.
Copper metal is an element and thus a pure substance.