No a seltzer has a gas phase and a liquid phase so its heterogeneous.
River water is generally a heterogeneous mixture based on the different components it is carrying. Water by definition is not an element, rather a molecule comprised of them.
heterogeneous mixture
Homogeneous mixture
A mixture of water and undissolved substances is a heterogeneous mixture because it is comprised of different substances. A heterogeneous mixture with undissolved substances that eventually settle is called a suspension. If the substances are too small to settle it's called a colloid.
That is called a heterogeneous mixture, when you can still see the parts of the mixture.
heterogeneous mixture because it is dissolved by water
compound solution because the salt is dissolved in the water :)
False. It is homogeneous
No. A solution is a homogeneous solution. A solution for example would be sugar dissolved in water (or salt dissolved in water), but a heterogeneous mixture would be sandy water or chunky vegetable soup.See the Related Questions for more information.
No. If the sugar is completely dissolved and then mixed thoroughly, it would be homogeneous.
Yes, a mixture of iodine and water is heterogeneous because the iodine does not dissolve completely in water, resulting in distinct particles of iodine suspended in the water. This makes it easy to visually distinguish between the iodine and water components.
A. Compound. C:
Tap water is a homogeneous mixture, which means it has a uniform composition throughout. It is a mixture of water molecules along with dissolved minerals, gases, and other compounds, but these components are evenly distributed.
No, mud water is not considered a solution. A solution is a homogeneous mixture where one substance (solute) is dissolved in another substance (solvent). In the case of mud water, it is a mixture of water and soil particles that have not dissolved into the water.
sugar itself is not a mixture, now dissolved in water is homogeneous, increasing quantity can lead to hetergeneous mixture because of precipitate
It is heterogeneous because the sand is not dissolved in the water. Apparently, the sand is still visible from the outside, unlike perhaps salt water in which the salt can no longer be seen.
A simple water accordingly is a Heterogeneous mixture.