An example of a polar liquid is water, while an example of a non-polar liquid is oil. A strong electrolyte commonly found in a household is table salt (sodium chloride). An example of an emulsion found at home is salad dressing, which is a mixture of oil and vinegar.
Water and candle wax would not form a solution because they do not mix at a molecular level. Instead, they would form a mixture, where the candle wax would remain separate as droplets or particles within the water.
Soil is the most heterogeneous. Air is also heterogeneous on a large scale: air near the sea usually contains more ozone than elsewhere, There is also an ozone layer in the upper atmosphere. Salt water is heterogeneous in the polar regions where melting ice contains less salt than other water.
If water would be a non polar molecule all the life chemistry would be changed or would not be possible. This non polar liquid would be unable to be a quasi-universal solvent.
No. It is polar. If you think about the mickey mouse ears, protons from the hydrogen atoms are on that side which makes it positively charged, and since the protons in the nucleus of the oxygen are split in half the bottom is negative.
A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture when two or more substances are mixed together but aren't chemically combined/joined
mixture of polar and nonpolar liquids.
An example of a polar liquid is water, while an example of a non-polar liquid is oil. A strong electrolyte commonly found in a household is table salt (sodium chloride). An example of an emulsion found at home is salad dressing, which is a mixture of oil and vinegar.
Water and candle wax would not form a solution because they do not mix at a molecular level. Instead, they would form a mixture, where the candle wax would remain separate as droplets or particles within the water.
assuming that 'washing up liquid' means soap, or a soap-water mix, the answer would be yes. soaps are long organic molecules with both a polar and a non polar end, and they can act similar to lubricants (such as motor oil, which is just a mixture of very long organic molecules that are entirely non-polar)
Petrol and water form a heterogeneous mixture because they do not mix together on a molecular level due to differences in polarity. Petrol is nonpolar, while water is polar, causing them to separate into distinct phases rather than dissolve into each other. This results in the formation of two visibly separate layers when combined.
Chloroform is miscible with water, forming a homogenous liquid mixture due to its polar nature. However, it is not miscible with cyclohexane, as cyclohexane is nonpolar and does not form a stable mixture with polar compounds like chloroform.
Soil is the most heterogeneous. Air is also heterogeneous on a large scale: air near the sea usually contains more ozone than elsewhere, There is also an ozone layer in the upper atmosphere. Salt water is heterogeneous in the polar regions where melting ice contains less salt than other water.
When a polar covalent bond and a nonpolar covalent substance combine, they may form a heterogeneous mixture where the polar and nonpolar components do not mix together. The polar and nonpolar substances will tend to separate due to their differing intermolecular forces.
If water would be a non polar molecule all the life chemistry would be changed or would not be possible. This non polar liquid would be unable to be a quasi-universal solvent.
A nonpolar liquid cannot dissolve polar molecules.
The physical state is based on the Intermolecular forces (IMF). Many organic compounds are non polar and have weak IMF's. They would likely be a gas. If the compound is polar, it would likely be a liquid.