Chemistry, asked by anitachawla249, 8 months ago

distinguish the homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures from the following:-.

Sugar solution in water, Air, Sand in water, Brass, Ink.
​if answer is correct I will make brainlist. if wrong thn the ans will report

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
3
Sugar solution in water - homogeneous
Air - homogeneous
Sand in water - heterogeneous
Brass - homogeneous
Ink - homogeneous

Hope this helps :)
Answered by har858
1

Explanation:

Homogeneous Mixtures

A homogeneous mixture is a mixture in which the composition is uniform throughout the mixture. The salt water described above is homogeneous because the dissolved salt is evenly distributed throughout the entire salt water sample. Often it is easy to confuse a homogeneous mixture with a pure substance because they are both uniform. The difference is that the composition of the substance is always the same. The amount of salt in the salt water can vary from one sample to another. All solutions would be considered homogeneous because the dissolved material is present in the same amount throughout the solution.

One characteristic of mixtures is that they can be separated into their components. Since each part of the mixture has not reacted with another part of the mixture, the identities of the different materials is unchanged.

Heterogeneous (pronounced HEH-tuh-roh-DJEEN-ee-uhs, from the Greek heteros or "other" and genos or "kind") is the characteristic of containing dissimilar constituents. A common use of this word in information technology is to describe a product as able to contain or be part of a "heterogeneous network," consisting of different manufacturers' products that can "interoperate." Heterogeneous networks are made possible by standards-conforming hardware and software interfaces used in common by different products, thus allowing them to communicate with each other. The Internet itself is an example of a heterogeneous network.

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