Vinegar is mainly diluted acetic acid. For a much longer and more complete explanation, see the question "What is vinegar?".
Yes, a heterogeneous mixture is one in which the components are not uniformly distributed, like oil and vinegar. An example of a heterogeneous mixture is oil and vinegar salad dressing. Another example is sand and water, where the sand particles do not dissolve in the water.
Oil and vinegar dressing is a heterogeneous mixture.
The mixture of oil and vinegar is heterogeneous because the two substances do not mix evenly and form separate layers. Milk is also a heterogeneous mixture because it contains different components that do not dissolve uniformly in each other. Air is a homogeneous mixture as it is a combination of gases that are uniformly distributed.
no
heterogeneous
No. Vinegar is a mixture of water and acetic acid.
it usually is a mixture of oil and vinegar.
That depends on what kind of vinegar you are asking about. Pure vinegar is a compound composed of Vinegar is acetic acid (HC2H3O2) but the vinegar you buy in a store is a homogeneous mixture of acetic acid and water.
Vinegar is a dilute mixture of acetic acid and water.
Oil and vinegar are a mixture. After a while they will separate.
Yes, white household vinegar is a homogeneous mixture.
Vinegar is a mixture of 4% ethanoic acid and 96% water
Vinegar is a mixture of two compounds --> Water and Acetic acid.
Yes, a heterogeneous mixture is one in which the components are not uniformly distributed, like oil and vinegar. An example of a heterogeneous mixture is oil and vinegar salad dressing. Another example is sand and water, where the sand particles do not dissolve in the water.
Vinegar is a homogeneous mixture of water and acetic acid.
Vinegar is not a metal. It is a mixture of water and acetic acid.
Vinegar is a mixture of two compounds --> Water and Acetic acid.