There are many different dyes. The solid dye itself may be a pure substance, or (particularly if it's a natural extract) a mixture of closely related substances. However, in use the dye is almost always dissolved, so the solution is a mixture. Some dyes also need to be mixed with a mordant to make them adhere to the material.
A mixture is a substance that has more than one component stirred together but does not undergo a chemical reaction. The components of a mixture can be physically separated from each other.
Red paint on a door is a mixture. It typically consists of various pigments, binders, solvents, and additives, which are combined to create the final product. Each component retains its own properties, making the paint a heterogeneous mixture rather than a pure substance like an element or a compound.
No, it is a mixture; rarely a drug is a pure substance.
The purpose is the homogenization of the sample temperature.
because sugar separates from tea!
A mixture is a substance that has more than one component stirred together but does not undergo a chemical reaction. The components of a mixture can be physically separated from each other.
usually it is stirred. It is stirred because if it is not, the paint might still have powder and ruin whatever you are painting if the powder is put on.
No because it has to be stirred to look like one substance. It is a suspension.
If we're referring to homogeneity, then vegetable soup, when stirred, is a good example of a substance being homogeneous.
To smoothly mix up the ingredients. water is stirred into the mix.
The coffee with added table sugar would be considered a mixture. The table sugar dissolves in the coffee, creating a homogeneous mixture where the sugar molecules are evenly distributed throughout the coffee.
No, it is a mixture.
An element - substance - NOT a mixture.
no paint is not a substance.
a mixture is not a substance
Yellow and blue paints when equally mixed and stirred make a green paint.
Red paint on a door is a mixture. It typically consists of various pigments, binders, solvents, and additives, which are combined to create the final product. Each component retains its own properties, making the paint a heterogeneous mixture rather than a pure substance like an element or a compound.