50/50 mix with 15 P.S.I. rad cap ( 265 degrees Fahrenheit / 129 degrees celsius )
A specific mixture has a fixed boiling point.
Milk is a mixture. Mixtures, unlike pure substances, have no definite boiling point.
well well well i was asking for the answer..??
Let's say substance A is the substance and substance B is the impurity. The boiling point of the mixture would be somewhere between that of A and B, depending on the amount of impurities in the mixture.
Distillation! Water and alcohol have different boiling points; one is lower than the other. Heat the mixture up until it one of the two boils away. In the case of alcohol and water, alcohol has the lower boiling point. Heat the mixture to just above the boiling point of alcohol but below the boiling point of water and voila!- you've separated the mixture.
150%*C
If the impurity has a higher boiling point then the boiling point of the mixture will also be slightly higher, and vice versa.
you can put the mixture in a pot and put the temperature as the boiling point of the one that has the lowest boiling point.
I did the experiment and the boiling point is 100 degrees Celsius, 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Air is a mixture of gases which also contains particulates. The particulates can be filtered out but the remainder is still a mixture. There is, therefore, no such thing as pure air. The boiling point of any mixture depends on the relative quantities of its constituents.
This because air is a mixture.
Opal is not a compound but a mixture, and so, its boiling point will depend on its exact composition. However, opals are mainly made of silica, whose boiling point is 2230 deg C.