A mixture consist of two or more different substances that are mixed but not chemically combined together.
Also there are two main types of mixtures, a solution and mechanical mixture. I think of a mechanic who works with his hands when i think of a mechanical mixture. A mechanical mixture is when you combine 2 or more substances and you can see all the different substances in the mixture.
In a solution, you can only see one uniform mixture. Like Iced tea and water. When you pour iced tea powder into water, you can only see the iced tea, you can not see both the iced tea powder and water, since the powder had dissolved. it6 is one or two items
So remember there are 2 mixtures:
- solution - you can not see the different parts
- mechanical mixture- you can see all of the different parts of the mixture
Mixtures
Simple: water solutions of sugar.
solid mixture is ervin gwapao siya
what kind of mixtures? mixing salt and sugar? salt and sand? but if you're a middle school chemistry student, then the answer ought to be yes.
The word used to explain the behavior of matter and mixtures is "chemistry." Chemistry is the branch of science that studies the composition, structure, properties, and reactions of matter. It explores how substances interact, combine, and transform.
Yes, containers keep chemicals or mixtures away from bacteria in the air.
In chemistry you work with mixtures, compounds, chemicals, elements, and you learn about atoms. Chemistry is very important because it teaches you many things like how to separate a mixture. Checks mix is a mixture and water is a compound.
One of the hardest methods in separating mixtures is chromatography, especially gas chromatography, as it requires expensive equipment and specialized training to operate. It involves separating components based on their different affinities for a stationary phase and a moving phase. It is commonly used in analytical chemistry to separate and analyze complex mixtures.
Summer sausage is a mixture of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures of mixtures, etc. wrapped in a mixture.
Chemistry developed from the observations of natural processes, in which substances were mixed, dissolved, heated, or cooled. Natural processes include rust, solubility, fermentation, crystallization, and alloying (mixtures of metals). (For more on how chemistry developed, see the related link)
Harold I. Zeliger has written: 'Human toxicology of chemical mixtures' -- subject(s): Toxicological chemistry, Environmental toxicology 'Human toxicology of chemical mixtures' -- subject(s): Environmental Exposure, Environmental Illness, Environmental Pollutants, Environmental toxicology, Hazardous substances, Toxicity, Toxicological chemistry
That depends entirely on the chemical reaction that you may be trying to create. Not all mixtures require salt.