ones which do not bond of chemically react eg. sand salt and water is a mixture. to separate you just filter the sand and then heat the salt and water. they do not chemically combine.
When the particles in a mixture are not the same size, they can separate based on their different sizes through methods such as filtration or sedimentation. This property allows for the physical separation of the components of the mixture.
When all of a mixture's atoms, molecules, and particles are evenly mixed it is called a colloid.
A suspension is the mixture with the largest particles.
Element-- all atoms are the same. Compound -- all atoms are not the same, but they have combined in an exact ratio so there is an exact formula, and the properties have changed from the elements to form the compound. ALL mixtures -- things are just stirred together with no change in their properties and no exact formula Heterogeneous mixture -- like salt and pepper mixed together, you can still see the individual particles Homogeneous mixture -- like salt and water, you can't see the different particles, but their properties have not changed. You can still taste the salt.
Visible particles would be heterogeneous elements of a mixture. A truly homogeneous mixture would have no visible particles. However, you could still have an approximately homogeneous mixture with visible particles, evenly distributed throughout the mixture.
When the particles in a mixture are not the same size, they can separate based on their different sizes through methods such as filtration or sedimentation. This property allows for the physical separation of the components of the mixture.
When all of a mixture's atoms, molecules, and particles are evenly mixed it is called a colloid.
Yes, a homogeneous mixture is uniform throughout, meaning that the components are evenly distributed at a molecular level. This results in a consistent composition and appearance in all parts of the mixture.
Sugar is a compound, a pure substance, as it only contains sucrose.
A suspension is the mixture with the largest particles.
A homogeneous mixture is uniform (the same) throughout.
Assuming you can't see the individual particles of its components and it has the same consistency throughout, it is a homogenous mixture.
Element-- all atoms are the same. Compound -- all atoms are not the same, but they have combined in an exact ratio so there is an exact formula, and the properties have changed from the elements to form the compound. ALL mixtures -- things are just stirred together with no change in their properties and no exact formula Heterogeneous mixture -- like salt and pepper mixed together, you can still see the individual particles Homogeneous mixture -- like salt and water, you can't see the different particles, but their properties have not changed. You can still taste the salt.
Even if the apple juice is labelled as '100% pure', it is still a mixture of water particles, sugar particles, flavour particles, and vitamin particles. So it is a mixture, not a pure substance.
nothing, the particles are visible because the particles are in the mixture. The substances being visble and identifiable in a mixture is because that mixture is heterogenous.
Visible particles would be heterogeneous elements of a mixture. A truly homogeneous mixture would have no visible particles. However, you could still have an approximately homogeneous mixture with visible particles, evenly distributed throughout the mixture.
No, sediment particles can vary in size from fine clay and silt to coarser sand and gravel. Sediment can contain a mixture of different particle sizes depending on the source and transport processes.