Jello, marshmallows, pudding, ice, milk, whipped cream, mayonnaise, jelly, etc.
Some might seem obvious, but others, like milk, aren't.
Yes, whipped cream is a colloid.
Yes, blood is an example of a colloid. It consists of red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma, which is a colloid solution containing proteins and other substances suspended in water.
Yes, albumin is a type of colloid. It is a protein found in blood plasma that helps maintain osmotic pressure and transports various substances.
A homogenous mixture of two or more substances that are not solutions is a colloid. Colloids have particles that are larger than the particles in a solution, but still do not settle out over time. Examples of colloids include milk and fog.
Yes, gelatin is considered a colloid because it forms a gel-like consistency when mixed with water, making it a colloidal dispersion. It consists of large molecules that are dispersed within a medium (water) without fully dissolving.
Oil and vinegar form a heterogeneous mixture.
colloid!
A colloid is a mixture of tiny particles of pure substances that disperse into a substance and do not settle over time. This means that a marshmallow's tiny particles of pure substance do not settle, they stay in their solid form (A fluffy delicious cylendar of mushy yum.)
Nitrous oxide is a mixture of two or more substances. Therefore, it is a heterogeneous substance. An example of a colloid mixture would be blood.
It depends on the colloid, really. If there are solid particles in the colloid, then they can be filtered. But you would need an extremely fine filter to be able to do so. In the case that the particles are liquid, then the answer would be no.
It is a colloid.
No the moon is not a colloid.