Any mixture that looks the same throughout such as salt water (mixed well). Things such as oil mixed with water would not be because the non-polar oil will not disolve in the polar water or vice versa.
No. Hydrogen is a pure substance and therefore is homogeneous.
Examples of solution are : 1) mixture of salt and sugar, 2) mixture of sugar and water.
Three examples of a mixture is air, Iron sulfide, and soil.
A conglomerate rock, salad, and chicken soup are a few examples.
Some examples of a buffer are mixture of ammonium hydroxide with ammonium chloride & mixture of acetic acid and sodium acetate.
yes, salt water is a homogenuous mixture.
Ethylene is a Homogenuous mixture which means it doesn't produce water.
think about that..can you see different liquids in cough syrup? different colors and chunks of meds? if not it is homogenuous.
think about that..can you see different liquids in cough syrup? different colors and chunks of meds? if not it is homogenuous.
think about that..can you see different liquids in cough syrup? different colors and chunks of meds? if not it is homogenuous.
No. Hydrogen is a pure substance and therefore is homogeneous.
no
milk, air, fog, sand in water, tomato juice are few examples of mixture
Examples of solution are : 1) mixture of salt and sugar, 2) mixture of sugar and water.
Three examples of a mixture is air, Iron sulfide, and soil.
A conglomerate rock, salad, and chicken soup are a few examples.
heterogeneous