No, it's a pure compound (at least, it can be; sugar you buy at the grocery store might not be absolutely pure). Chemically speaking "sugar" is a class of compounds. There are lots of different sugars: sucrose (this is cane sugar, the grocery store kind), glucose (blood sugar), maltose (malt sugar), galactose and lactose (sugars found in milk), fructose (fruit sugar), and many others (you may have noticed a pattern: the names of sugars tend to end with -ose). Yes Sugar is a mixture
Table sugar is not a mechanical mixture but a compound. Table sugar is composed of two or more elements so it can be categorized as compound mixture as the formula C12H22O11 describes it as a compound.
Table sugar is a pure compound made of sucrose. Sucrose has the molecular formula of C12H22O11 and is a disaccharide made up of glucose connected with fructose.
Table sugar is a substance and it is also a compound!!
C12h22o11
Yes, Heterogeneous Additional information: The sugar is dissolved in the water. This "mixture" consists of two different types of molecules (thus we call it a mixture): water molecules (H2O) and sugar molecules (one type of sugar is table sugar, C12H22O11)
Table sugar is a pure substance. It is made up of one type of molecule that cannot be separated into two or more components. Mixtures can be separated. For example, a mixture of water and sand can be separated into two components. Other examples of pure substances are diamonds, and table salt.
Sugar is a compound. It consists of several different elements depending on the type of sugar. A compound is formed by a chemical reaction and cannot be separated. You can't separate sugar into other substances physically.
Table sugar is generally provided in solid state, as a fine dust off small crystals. Since a solution is constituted by a liquid solvent where another substance (a solute)) is dissolved, table sugar is not a solution. It becomes part of a solution (the solute) if it is dissolved in water, or in coffee for example.
Yes. Sugar solution is a homogeneous mixture.
Table sugar is a compound.
Table sugar is not a mechanical mixture but a compound. Table sugar is composed of two or more elements so it can be categorized as compound mixture as the formula C12H22O11 describes it as a compound.
Table sugar is a compound.
Table sugar (sucrose) is a chemical compound not a mixture.
No, its not a homogenous mixture as sugar and sugar are not distributed uniformly. However, sugar in water and salt in water is a homogenous mixture.
Table sugar, which most likely is sucrose, is a compound.
sugar itself is not a mixture, now dissolved in water is homogeneous, increasing quantity can lead to hetergeneous mixture because of precipitate
No, that would be a mixture.
Sugar is a name for a class of carbohydrate of which there are many; frusctose, maltose, glucose etc. Common table sugar is a dissaccharide (compound) of two sugars, glucose and fructose and is chemically called sucrose.
Yes, Heterogeneous Additional information: The sugar is dissolved in the water. This "mixture" consists of two different types of molecules (thus we call it a mixture): water molecules (H2O) and sugar molecules (one type of sugar is table sugar, C12H22O11)
Yes, Heterogeneous Additional information: The sugar is dissolved in the water. This "mixture" consists of two different types of molecules (thus we call it a mixture): water molecules (H2O) and sugar molecules (one type of sugar is table sugar, C12H22O11)
Yes