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AP®︎/College Chemistry
Course: AP®︎/College Chemistry > Unit 3
Lesson 7: Solutions and mixturesTypes of mixtures
A mixture is composed of one or more pure substances in varying composition. There are two types of mixtures: heterogeneous and homogeneous. Heterogeneous mixtures have visually distinguishable components, while homogeneous mixtures appear uniform throughout. The most common type of homogenous mixture is a solution, which can be a solid, liquid, or gas. Created by Sal Khan.
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- At aroundin the video, Sal says that homogeneous mixtures are also known as solutions. However, the description of this videos says that "the most common type of homogeneous mixture is a solution, which can be a solid, liquid, or gas". Are there homogeneous mixtures that are not considered solutions, or are all homogeneous mixtures considered solutions? 1:35(9 votes)
- Yes, all solutions are homogeneous mixtures, but not all homogeneous mixtures are solutions. If we refer to the definition of a solution, we are told that all the solutes (or things being dissolved) must be completely dissolved in the solvent with no excess. However, homogeneous mixtures are simply mixtures with uniform consistency throughout. Therefore, if we take milk as an example, we can conclude that it is indeed a homogeneous mixture, yet it is not a solution, since there are still fat particles floating around in the milk. Although the particles of fat in the milk are not observable, the fat is not completely dissolved into the milk, so it is not a solution. I hope this helps.(18 votes)
- So in summary, how would you differentiate homogeneous and heterogeneous mixtures?(1 vote)
- Heterogonous mixtures are ones in which their constituents do not mix uniformly, while homogenous mixtures are ones in which they mix uniformly. Uniformity means all the constituent particles are evenly distributed and are indistinguishable from each other.
An example of a heterogeneous mixture would be a stew. You can easily distinguish the different ingredients of a stew by simply looking at it; meat, carrots, potatoes, broth. Whereas tea would be an example of a homogenous mixture because the ingredients are mixed together evenly such that you could not distinguish the sugar from the water.
Hope that helps.(8 votes)
- Examples of solution and mixture(4 votes)
- there are two type of solution ther are- suspension and colloidal solution
and there are two types of mixture they are- homogenious and hetrogenious(1 vote)
- Is baked Beanz a mixture?(2 votes)
- Yep. A mixture would mean there is more than one component. Baked beans do not solely contain beans, they also contain maple syrup, brown sugar, and beacon most often.(1 vote)
- what would happen if we mix a heterogenous solution with a homogenous solution?(1 vote)
- Assuming no additional dissolution occurs after the mixing, you would just create a new heterogeneous mixture.(2 votes)
- Is seawater heterogeneous because the consistency of salt in water is not uniform?(1 vote)
- There can be slight difference in the salinity of seawater, but this wouldn’t make it heterogeneous. The difference is so small so that seawater can still be considered uniform and homogenous. The inclusion of large undissolved solids would make it heterogeneous.
Hope that helps.(2 votes)
- Also, what is uniform and non-uniform?(1 vote)
- Uniform means that all the constituent particles are evenly distributed and indistinguishable from each other while non-uniform is the complete opposite, the particles are not evenly distributed and the particles can be distinguishable. So basically uniform is in a homogenous mixture and non-uniform in heterogenous mixtures
Hope it helped you!(1 vote)
- noice what is a mixturre(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] I suspect that
you might already be familiar with the term mixture. It really does mean
what you think it means. If you take two or more substances and you were to mix them together, you are dealing with a mixture. And it could be a solid,
a liquid or a gas. Now there's fundamentally two
different types of mixtures. There's heterogeneous mixtures. And hetero, you're going
to see that prefix a lot, means different. So heterogeneous, this
is referring to mixtures that if you look at it
from a macro point of view, I'll do a heterogeneous liquid mixture. And what I often think of
here at the extreme form is where with my naked eye, I could see that different
parts of the mixtures have different concentrations
of the different things that have been mixed up. One example I often think
of is chocolate milk that's not well mixed. At the top you're going
to see these clumps and depending where you are in the milk, you can actually see it with your eye, that you don't have
consistent concentrations of the different substances. The properties of the
mixtures are different, depending on what part of
the mixture you look at. Now, you can imagine if
there's heterogeneous mixtures, the opposite would be
homogeneous mixtures. Those would be mixtures
that when you look at it from a macro point of
view, it looks consistent any point of the mixture. Homogeneous mixtures. And homogeneous mixtures,
there's another term for it, which you have probably heard. They're also known as solutions. And as I mentioned, when
we talk about mixtures, we could be talking about
solid, liquid or gas. Oftentimes in our head, we
think liquid immediately, but it can be solid liquid or gas. And so the same thing
is true for solutions. You can have solid liquids or gases. And an example of a
solid solution would be, say a metal alloy. Where at the macro level it's color, how well does it conduct electricity? How malleable is it? How hard is it? It looks like the properties are uniform throughout the alloy. If I have some type of metal alloy, if I were to just look at it like this, if I were to look at say bronze, well, from my point of view, it has the same properties
throughout the bronze. And I should probably do
bronze in a more bronze color right over here. But if you were to look at it with a very sensitive microscope or based on the models that we now know what is
going on in that metal, in that alloy, what's happening is you actually
have a mixture of metals. But it is a homogeneous mixture of metals because at a macro level, you can't really see the differences. Now at a micro level, you can, because there are different
metals mixed in together in this alloy. Now, as can imagine you
also have liquid solutions and in chemistry, these are the ones that
we'll often deal most. We will also deal with solid
and gas solutions as well. And when I think of a
homogeneous liquid mixture or a liquid solution, the one
that comes to mind for me, but we'll see a lot of these in our journey through
chemistry is salt water. Salt water. Salt water has sodium
chloride dissolved in water. And if you were to go to the ocean, and if you were to just
look at the salt water, or if you were to measure its
properties, even in a lab, you would see that the properties
throughout the salt water seem to be uniform. At a macro level, it
appears to be homogeneous. It appears to be uniform. But if you were to look
at what's happening at an atomic level, you would see that you
have your water molecules. Let me draw the water like that. That is the oxygen, each
of them has two hydrogens. And this end is partially positive, we've seen this multiple
times, the hydrogen end, the oxygen end is partially negative. And so when you dissolve
the sodium chloride, the chloride anions are attracted to the
positive ends of the water. So maybe you have a chloride anion there. And the sodium ions would be attracted to the
negative end of the H2O. So that's the sodium right over there. So when you look at it
at a micro perspective, you see that there are
different molecules, but at a macro perspective,
the macro properties, how it responds to different stimulus, how well it conducts electricity,
what it even looks like, it seems to be uniform. Now to be clear, saltwater is
not the only liquid solution. There's many types of liquid solutions. In chemistry, we'll often see water as our most common solvent. That's the thing that
you have the most of, the thing that other things
are getting dissolved in it. The things that are getting dissolved are called the solute, in this case it would
be the sodium chloride and the water is the solvent. Let me write that down, solvent. When you have a solution where you have something
dissolved in water, this is often called an
aqueous, aqueous solution. And sometimes it's abbreviated aq. Now, last but not least, we
haven't talked about gases yet. And you can for sure
have a solution of gas. And the one that's most common is the one that you and I
are breathing right now. The air around you is a gas solution. It's macroscopic
properties seem consistent, they seem uniform, but we know that the gas around
us is a mixture of nitrogen, of oxygen, of carbon dioxide, as well as molecules of other things. So a good example of a
gas solution would be air. So I'll let you go there. That's just a good primer
on what a mixture is, the types of mixtures and especially the subtype of a mixture, which is a homogeneous mixture, which we often call a solution.