You think probable to a solvent for the solvent extraction method.
Mixture in general but there are much more specific categories.
Chromatography separates a mixture of pigments, usually in inks. You can separate colours in food and felt tips. The different solubilities of the different ink pigments, make some rise above others so you can see them clearly.
mixture
Yes, playdough is a homogeneous mixture because it consists of different compounds uniformly distributed throughout the material without visible boundaries.
Wood is a MIXTURE of many compounds, so your answer would be a mixture.
The separation technique you are referring to is called chromatography. In chromatography, different compounds in a mixture are separated based on their different rates of movement across a material (such as paper or a column filled with beads) due to differences in their affinity for the material and the solvent used. This process allows for the identification and analysis of individual components in a mixture.
A fork is a physical object made of a single material, typically metal or plastic. Therefore, a fork is considered a pure substance, which falls under the category of elements or compounds depending on the material it is made of.
It is a mixture of compounds.
Koolaid is made from a mixture of compounds, thus it is a mixture.
Bones are a complex structure made up of various compounds, primarily hydroxyapatite, collagen, and water. Therefore, bones are considered a composite material rather than a compound element or a mixture of elements.
LPG gas is a mixture of propane and butane, which are both compounds.
Yes, sublimation can separate a mixture based on differences in volatility. Extraction can separate compounds based on differences in solubility. Decantation separates solid particles from a liquid phase. Filtration separates a solid from a liquid or a gas. Evaporation separates a solute from a solvent based on differences in boiling points.