To make salt water a heterogeneous mixture, you could add an immiscible substance such as oil or sand to the water with salt. This would create two distinct phases that do not mix evenly, resulting in a heterogeneous mixture.
Oils and sweat would form a heterogeneous mixture because they are immiscible, meaning they do not dissolve into each other. The oils would float on the sweat, creating distinct layers within the mixture.
A pail of water and sand is not a homogeneous mixture, as it does not have a uniform composition throughout. The water and sand in the pail would be considered a heterogeneous mixture, as the two substances do not dissolve into each other and can be easily separated. Homogeneous mixtures, on the other hand, have a uniform composition and cannot be easily distinguished visually.
seawater is a homogeneous mixture. The water being the solvent and the salt being the solute. A heterogeneous mixture is mixed but not as thoroughly as a homogeneous mixture. None of these though are chemically combined, none are compounds. (hence mixture)
Homogenised milk is a homogeneous colloidal dispersion of the milk solids in the liquid milk. The colloidal particles are sized as per the requirements in high-speed colloidal mills. It is not a heterogeneous mixture.
A heterogeneous mixture always contains more than one phase. A phase is a region with uniform composition and properties. The substances in a heterogeneous mixture remain physically separate e.g. sugar and sand.
Oils and sweat would form a heterogeneous mixture because they are immiscible, meaning they do not dissolve into each other. The oils would float on the sweat, creating distinct layers within the mixture.
No. They make a homogeneous mixture called a solution.
The electrolytes will completely dissociate in the water. Therefore it will be a homogeneous mixture.An example of heterogeneous mixture is sand in water.
A pail of water and sand is not a homogeneous mixture, as it does not have a uniform composition throughout. The water and sand in the pail would be considered a heterogeneous mixture, as the two substances do not dissolve into each other and can be easily separated. Homogeneous mixtures, on the other hand, have a uniform composition and cannot be easily distinguished visually.
seawater is a homogeneous mixture. The water being the solvent and the salt being the solute. A heterogeneous mixture is mixed but not as thoroughly as a homogeneous mixture. None of these though are chemically combined, none are compounds. (hence mixture)
Yes, an element can be part of a heterogeneous mixture. For example, if iron filings are mixed with sand, the resulting mixture would be heterogeneous as the iron filings and sand do not mix at a molecular level.
Nope... it's a mixture.
Yes, salt and pepper together make a mixture. It is a heterogeneous mixture.
yes
You can make your own mixtures....there is no limit to the product.
no. because you would only be able to seperate the things that make it up on a molecular level
me don't know