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If all of the molecules of the substance are the same molecule
No. A pure substances has a definite and constant composition.
An aerosol may be pure or an impure material, homogeneous or not.
It depends on what you're trying to accomplish. Helium is a pure substance. Corn flakes are a mixture. If you're trying to blow up balloons, the pure substance has one huge advantage over the mixture: balloons filled with corn flakes are no fun. But if it's 6 am and you want to eat breakfast, you'd better stick to the mixture.
An "illustration" is a drawing, it has both material and abstract parts.
This depends on the specific application of a material.
An element is a pured substance and a pure substance is a material
If all of the molecules of the substance are the same molecule
An "illustration" is a drawing, it has both material and abstract parts.
No. A pure substances has a definite and constant composition.
An aerosol may be pure or an impure material, homogeneous or not.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a chemical compound.
well Tell the person its a pure substance so a pure substance can only compound one matter
It depends on what you're trying to accomplish. Helium is a pure substance. Corn flakes are a mixture. If you're trying to blow up balloons, the pure substance has one huge advantage over the mixture: balloons filled with corn flakes are no fun. But if it's 6 am and you want to eat breakfast, you'd better stick to the mixture.
An "illustration" is a drawing, it has both material and abstract parts.
Generally an impure material is cheaper than a pure material; the word advantage is not so adequate here - can use pure or impure, this depends on the specific applications.
It's a mix (probably an alloy), a pure substance has a single melting point.