A mixture is a combination of two or more substances. Salt water, coffee, whipped cream and tea are all types of mixtures.
two mixtures are hot chocolate and juice or vinegar and lemonade.
Mixtures are divided into two groups: homogeneous mixtures, where the components are evenly distributed and indistinguishable, and heterogeneous mixtures, where the components are not evenly distributed and can be seen as separate phases.
Heterogenous and Homogenous mixtures. Homogenous mixtures are uniform in appearance. Sea water is a mixture containing primarily Sodium Chloride and water. If you take a sample of this mixture, you will see that the salt fully dissolves in water and the sample is uniform in appearance. Heterogenous mixtures non-uniform. You can see the components of the mixture. An Example is a mixture of oil and water. Oil does not dissolve in water and forms a separate layer above water.
Examples of homogeneous mixtures at home: vinegar, wine, beer.
Homogeneous mixtures have uniform composition throughout, with the same properties in all parts. Heterogeneous mixtures have non-uniform composition, with distinct phases or regions that can be visually identified.
heterogenous mixtures
Mixtures.
No
Heterogenous mixtures undergo physical change (I THINK)
2 or more
two mixtures are hot chocolate and juice or vinegar and lemonade.
Heterogenous mixtures are not uniform throughout the liquid. For example flour and water mixture is heterogenous because the flour isn't going to be uniformly located throughout the liquid. Homogenized milk is homogenous, as the concentration of particles throughout the liquid is evenly distributed. Heterogenous mixtues will often "settle", homogenous will not settle over time.
Heterogenous, it has visible layers of mixtures.
Cheese chips are not heterogeneous mixtures.
Mixtures are divided into two groups: homogeneous mixtures, where the components are evenly distributed and indistinguishable, and heterogeneous mixtures, where the components are not evenly distributed and can be seen as separate phases.
No, not all mixtures are solutions. A solution is a homogenous mixture where the substances are evenly distributed, but mixtures can be either homogenous or heterogenous. Heterogenous mixtures have uneven distribution of substances and do not form a clear solution.
Some examples of heterogeneous mixtures are:Sand in waterSmokeChicken soupProtoplasmSilt in waterTomato juiceCloudsVinegar in oilMayonnaiseIce teaConcreteWoodSalad dressingSoilChocolate chip cookieMuddy watersugar and cornstarchMixture of different types of cereals