No. Oil and water would form a heterogeneous mixture. A solution is a homogeneous mixture.
HOW TO SEPARATE SALT FROM OIL .First of all to separate salt from oil you need to pour some water, salt, and oil into a beaker in that order. .After you have put those materials in the beaker, you should see the salt dissolving, then you should be left with oil and water. .Next to separate the oil from the water you could either, leave the solution for a while and the oil eventually should rise to the top and float above the water, or you could use a funnel with a stopcock at the bottom which will allow you to drain the water out underneath the oil. GOOD LUCK! :)
no!
No, oil would not be soluble to create the solution without some type of emulsifier.
Examples of a mixture is oil and water, element is copper and a solution is salt and water.
Typically, water will dilute a solution. However, that said, it also depends what you're adding the water to, ex. adding water to oil won't dilute in the same ways.
pouring it into a beaker and permanently stirring it
no
HOW TO SEPARATE SALT FROM OIL .First of all to separate salt from oil you need to pour some water, salt, and oil into a beaker in that order. .After you have put those materials in the beaker, you should see the salt dissolving, then you should be left with oil and water. .Next to separate the oil from the water you could either, leave the solution for a while and the oil eventually should rise to the top and float above the water, or you could use a funnel with a stopcock at the bottom which will allow you to drain the water out underneath the oil. GOOD LUCK! :)
If a membrane-bound sac filled with large molecules of oil is suspended in a beaker of water, water will start to enter the sac. The sac will then swell.
no!
Water will enter the sac and it will swell
Water will enter the sac and it will swell
The oil is an apolar solution while the water is a polar solution. Apolar and polar solutions dont like to mix.
It is neither, it is an element
The initial choice is the only one that will readily make a solution.
No, normally it isn't . If you mixed oil and water together and left it, then it would separate out to form different layers. This means that the oil isn't dissolving in the water (or vise versa). that means that it isn't a solution it is a mixture
It is because of the different viscosity of the two liquids