Heating mineral oil that has been mixed with water will cause the water to evaporate. Since the mineral oil evaporates at higher temperatures than water, the water vapor can be collected first and stored in a separate container.
to seprate solube substance
yes and it has a seprate nucules
Oil is not soluble in water. That's why two layers form when you pour oil onto water - the top layer being oil (it is less dense than water)
emulsifier. Also, a device that removes oil from water, or water from oil - depending upon its application.
The phrase "oil in water, no water oil" suggests a scenario where oil is present in water but not the other way around. This typically refers to an emulsion where oil droplets are dispersed in water. However, oil and water are immiscible, meaning they don't mix well; instead, oil tends to float on the surface of water due to differences in density. In practical terms, this phenomenon can be observed in various contexts, such as cooking or environmental spills.
they don't mix. try it
yes water is made of seprate atoms
its either a mess, or they are seprate oil on top water on th bottom, or it would be an emusifacation, like mayo its either a mess, or they are seprate oil on top water on th bottom, or it would be an emusifacation, like mayo It is A. emulsionIf water and oil are combined in a container the resulting liquid is an immiscible mixture. It is also considered a suspension, which is where the particles in suspension are larger than those found in solution. The suspension can be distributed evenly by a method like shaking, but will settle out.
to seprate solube substance
seprate is not a word do u mean separate
Sugar will dissolve in water but flour won't. Mix both in water, strain out the flour. Evaporate the water and what is left is sugar.
Separate.
nope
it contains water and the equment to seprate h2 O so he can have that o i think
It constitutionaliszed the "Seprate, but Equal" doctrine.
all availabil
alchole