In chemistry, a mixture is a substance made by combining two or more different materials without a chemical reaction occurring (the objects do not bond together).
While there are no chemical changes in a mixture, the physical properties of a mixture, such as its melting point, may differ from those of its components. Mixtures can usually be separated into its original components by any mechanical means.
Mixtures are either homogeneous or heterogeneous.
Mixtures are the product of a mechanical blending or mixing of chemical substances like elements and compounds, without chemical bonding or other chemical change, so that each ingredient substance retains its own chemical properties and makeup.
Homogeneous mixtures
Homogeneous mixtures are mixtures that have definite, consistent properties. Particles are uniformly spread. For example, any amount of a given mixture has the same composition and properties. Examples are
solutions and some
alloys (but not all). A homogeneous mixture is a uniform mixture consisting of only one phase. Examples are gasoline and margarine.
Solutions
A solution is when a
Homogeneous mixture of one or more substances (the
solutes)
dissolved in another substance (the
solvent). Solutions have all particles within the size of atoms, small molecules or small ions, less than 1 nanometer (nm) in all dimensions. A common example would be a
solid dissolving into a
liquid (i.e.
salt or
sugar dissolving in water or
gold into
mercury). Liquids dissolve into one another, and sometimes liquids dissolve into gases, for example
water vapor and the
atmosphere. Common examples include fountain drinks, where
carbon dioxide is trapped in the liquid through
carbonation. Several solution properties collectively called
colligative properties change as a function of solute concentration.
Solubility is a compound property.
Heterogeneous mixtures
Heterogeneous mixtures are mixtures with inconsistent, non-uniform composition. The parts of a heterogeneous composition can be mechanically separated from each other. Examples include salad,
trail mix, sand, salt mixed with sand, sandy water, ocean water, and soil.
Suspensions
A heterogeneous mixture in which the particles, of at least one component is larger than 1μm (1000nm) in at least one dimension, larger than colloidal particles. Unlike colloids, suspensions will eventually settle. An example of a suspension would be sand in water another example would be clothing made up of 2 or more materials such as cotton and polyester. Particles of suspensions exhibit the
Tyndall effect, that is, they are big enough to disperse light.
Colloidal dispersions
Colloids are heterogeneous mixtures in which the particles of one or more components have at least one dimension in the range of 1 to 1000nm, larger than those in a solution but smaller than those in a suspension. In general, a colloid or colloidal dispersion is a substance with components of one or two phases. It creates the
Tyndall effect when light passes through it. A colloid will not settle. Jelly, milk, blood, paint, fog, and glue are examples of colloid dispersions.
Mixtures and compounds
A
compound is not a mixture. A compound has very different properties than the elements it is made of, but a mixture contains several substances which keep their properties.
See also
References
External links