101mL.
Tap water is not a pure substance because it is mixed with chemicals that purify it and if it was from the ground it has naturally occurring minerals mixed in it.
Yes. Due to the Law of the Conservation of Matter, anything combined with water will increase in volume, because water itself has volume, which is not lost by combining water with anything else.
A homogeneous mixture is of uniform content throughout the entire container. In other words, the 2 parts of the mixture are completely mixed (example: vinegar and water). A heterogeneous mixture will not be completely mixed, and the concentrations are not even throughout the mixture (example: oil and water).
No, you will form a 2 phase mixture.
It is heterogeneous mixture because it is not mixed in equally.
A mixture because the sugar is mixed in the water
It depends on the mixture. In a homogeneous mixture such as air, salt water, or brass the particles are evenly mixed. But in a heterogeneous mixture such as mud or oily water there is an uneven distribution.
It depends on the mixture. In a homogeneous mixture such as air, salt water, or brass the particles are evenly mixed. But in a heterogeneous mixture such as mud or oily water there is an uneven distribution.
Tap water is not a pure substance because it is mixed with chemicals that purify it and if it was from the ground it has naturally occurring minerals mixed in it.
Mixture; the tea and water
Sometimes They are in a a homogeneous mixture such as salt water or brass but are not in a heterogeneous mixture such as mud or oily water.
salt water is a type of well mixed mixture called a solution
A solution, which is a homogeneous mixture.
A hydrocolloid (heterogenous) mixture
salt in water is a homogeneous mixture
Yes. Due to the Law of the Conservation of Matter, anything combined with water will increase in volume, because water itself has volume, which is not lost by combining water with anything else.
A homogeneous mixture is of uniform content throughout the entire container. In other words, the 2 parts of the mixture are completely mixed (example: vinegar and water). A heterogeneous mixture will not be completely mixed, and the concentrations are not even throughout the mixture (example: oil and water).