Immiscible liquids are two or more liquids that do not mix together and instead separate into distinct layers. An example of immiscible liquids is oil and water, where the oil forms a separate layer on top of the water due to their different densities and polarities.
Immiscible gases are gases that do not mix or dissolve in each other. This means that when two immiscible gases come into contact, they will not form a homogeneous mixture but instead will remain as separate phases. An example of immiscible gases is nitrogen and helium.
When a solid "mixes" with a liquid the solid can be termed soluble and will "dissolve" in said liquid (salt and water), if the solid does not dissolve it is termed insoluble (sand in a glass of water). When a liquid "mixes" with another liquid the two are classed as miscible, if the two liquids do not mix and form two separate layers, the liquids are classed as being immiscible
An example of a mixture of insoluble liquid and liquid is oil and water. When oil and water are combined, they do not mix together and form separate layers due to their different polarities. This type of mixture is called an emulsion.
The mixture of 2 immiscible liquids is called an emulsion. This occurs when small droplets of one liquid are dispersed throughout the other liquid. Examples include oil and water or vinegar and oil.
To change from a gas into a liquid you must cool the substance. For example: water vapour to water.
I think what you meant was immiscible liquids. Immiscible liquid mean that it cannot form a homgeneous mixture when they are mixed together. A good example o f this is water are oil. The oil sits on top of the water.
A very simple answer: vegetable oils and water.
they meet at the distillation
If two liquids are miscible, it means they are capable of being mixed together in all proportions. For example, water and ethanol are miscible as they mix together. If two liquids are immiscible, it means that they don't mix together and they don't form a solution in some proportion. For example, water is immiscible with oil.
The purpose of the vial of immiscible liquid in the experiment is to create a clear boundary between two liquids that do not mix, allowing for the observation of how substances interact at their interface.
Water.
Immiscible gases are gases that do not mix or dissolve in each other. This means that when two immiscible gases come into contact, they will not form a homogeneous mixture but instead will remain as separate phases. An example of immiscible gases is nitrogen and helium.
Examples of immiscible liquids include oil and water, gasoline and water, and vinegar and oil. Immiscible liquids do not mix together to form a homogeneous solution and instead separate into distinct layers.
When a solid "mixes" with a liquid the solid can be termed soluble and will "dissolve" in said liquid (salt and water), if the solid does not dissolve it is termed insoluble (sand in a glass of water). When a liquid "mixes" with another liquid the two are classed as miscible, if the two liquids do not mix and form two separate layers, the liquids are classed as being immiscible
An example of a mixture of insoluble liquid and liquid is oil and water. When oil and water are combined, they do not mix together and form separate layers due to their different polarities. This type of mixture is called an emulsion.
The mixture of 2 immiscible liquids is called an emulsion. This occurs when small droplets of one liquid are dispersed throughout the other liquid. Examples include oil and water or vinegar and oil.
Emulsion is a mixture of two or more immiscible liquid (liquids which do not mix in other liquids), one is dispersed by the other. Example : water in oil - water is dispersed in oil ( medium)