No, it is a chemically homogeneous substance.
There are many types of sugar but, if you are describing one type of sugar and not a mixture of many sugars it would be a pure substance.
Nickel is an element. It is a chemical element with the symbol Ni and atomic number 28. It is a hard, silvery-white metal.
No it is not a compound. It is a mixture of air, H20, carbon dioxide, decomposed water creatures and sand particles.
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.
No, white sugar is not an element. White sugar is a compound made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms.
yes
It is a compound.
No, it is a chemically homogeneous substance.
There are many types of sugar but, if you are describing one type of sugar and not a mixture of many sugars it would be a pure substance.
Neither, it is a product and commodity! (Pure) Sugar is a compound containing the elements hydrogen, Oxygen and Carbon.
Gold itself is an element. All of the gold you are likely to see (rings, watches, plating, etc.) is an alloy (mixture) of gold and other metals. Even "pure gold" jewellery (24 k) is only +99.9% pure
White foam waves are a mixture. Foam is typically formed by the introduction of air or gas bubbles into a liquid, such as water, creating a collection of water molecules and air/gas bubbles that appear white due to light scattering.
B. a mixture. Since the powder contains both white and blue specks, it is a mixture of different substances.
White ash is a compound, not an element. It is primarily composed of calcium carbonate, which is a compound made up of calcium, carbon, and oxygen atoms.
It is a mixture!Blood is a mixture of red and white blood cells, platelets, and plasma, which is itself a mixture.
A white crystalline solid can be either a compound or an element. It depends on the specific substance in question. For example, table salt (sodium chloride) is a white crystalline compound, while pure elemental sulfur can also be a white crystalline solid. Testing and analysis are usually needed to determine whether the solid is a compound or an element.