Instant coffee in water is a heterogeneous mixture. When instant coffee is added to water, it can initially appear uniform, but the coffee particles may not fully dissolve, leading to visible granules or layers. Over time, if stirred thoroughly, it can become homogeneous, but the initial state is typically heterogeneous.
Instant coffee in water is a homogeneous mixture, meaning it has a uniform composition throughout. The coffee particles are fully dissolved in water, resulting in a consistent mixture.
Homogeneous
Water and instant coffee is a homogeneous mixture, specifically a solution, because the instant coffee particles dissolve evenly in the water forming a uniform mixture. It is not an element, as elements are pure substances made up of only one type of atom.
3 in 1 coffee powder is an example of a homogeneous mixture because all the components (coffee, creamer, sugar) are evenly distributed throughout the mixture and cannot be easily separated.
That would be a heterogeneous mixture as there would be small particles floating in the water.
It would be a heterogeneous mixture because of the little coffee grounds floating around. It's not uniform throughout.
homogeneous
It would be a heterogeneous mixture because of the little coffee grounds floating around. It's not uniform throughout.
Homogeneous
Just pure black coffee is a homogeneous mixture if it looks like its one entity (no little particles of sugar floating around, streaks of cream, etc.) basically if it looks like a solution (a mixture that seems to be made of only one thing) then it is a homogeneous mixture.
This is a homogeneous solution.
heterogeneous