Water, of course ! Water is the liquid that doesn't mix well with oil.
any thig
because the molecules in coconut oil are not close and it is a viscous liquid
If it does, then oil and vinegar should mix in to a nice solution. The answer is, "no"
liquids with different densities will not mix. example/ oil and water, water is les dense and floats ontop of the oil, in a glass container there are obvious layers of water and oil. some liquid 'mixtures' take longer than others because their densities are close in value.
Water, of course ! Water is the liquid that doesn't mix well with oil.
Depends on which liquid.
any thig
oil
oil
oil
They won't mix. You will get two separate layers of liquid.
polarity! Polarity is the reason that water and oil do not mix
because the molecules in coconut oil are not close and it is a viscous liquid
Large quantities of liquid refrigerant enter the compressor and then mix with the lubricating oil in the compressors sump.
That is the correct spelling of "petroleum" (crude oil, a mix of liquid hydrocarbons).
Naturally, as oil is a liquid it spreads out. And if we are talking about water it would spread on the surface of the water as oil and water don't mix.