it can't be done. It will always separate, eventually. The best you can do is make a suspension using a hand blender. That will stay together the longest.
No, oil and water in a beaker would not be classified as a solution. Oil and water are immiscible, meaning they do not mix together to form a homogeneous solution. Instead, they separate into distinct layers due to differences in polarity.
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
there is no such thing as a heterogeneous solution because a solution is a HOMOgeneous mixture, where there is a uniform appearance, the exact opposite of a HETEROgeneous mixture where the mixture does NOT have a uniform apearance (you can see different parts in the mixture, e.g. oil and water)
Salt water and oil are not a homogeneous mixture because they do not blend together uniformly. Oil is hydrophobic and does not mix with water, causing it to form distinct layers when combined. Salt water, on the other hand, is a homogeneous mixture because salt dissolves completely in water, resulting in a uniform solution.
oil and vinegar do not form a solution, oil does not disolve in vinegar, which is approximately 95% water.
An example of miscible liquids is ethanol and water. When mixed together, they form a homogeneous solution with uniform composition. This is because the molecular structures of ethanol and water allow them to mix evenly at the molecular level.
Mixing salt and water to form a saltwater solution is an example of a solution. In this case, the salt dissolves in the water, creating a uniform mixture where the salt particles are evenly distributed throughout the water.
No benzene is extremely hydrophobic and sits like an oil on top of the water.
Immiscible means incapable of mixing, but you'd (you might) have to ask further incase there is a special solution called 'immiscible solution' of which its inability to mix is only one aspect of it.
Water molecules won't form a solution (are not miscible) in oil. The reason is that water molecules are polar, and oil molecules are not. Water molecules, in an environment of oil, are attracted to each other, and this polar bonding excludes the oil molecules.
No, glycerin oil and water are miscible liquids, meaning they can be mixed together and form a homogeneous solution. This is because glycerin is soluble in water due to its hydrophilic nature.
No, a mixture of oil and vinegar is not a solution. Solutions are homogeneous mixtures where one substance dissolves in another, while oil and vinegar will typically separate into distinct layers due to their different polarities.