yes as it is in same phase
Yes. Pure air is a homogenous mixture. Air is a mixture of various kinds of gases. A mixture is said to be homogenous when all its constituents are in phase. Example, a mixture of water & milk is a homogenous mixture, as water & milk both are liquids & are in phase. Same is the case with pure air. All the constituents gases of pure air are in phase with each other. Hence its a homogenous mixture.
Homogenous.
The best process for the separation of components of air is fractional distillation of air. The process includes the liquefaction of air first and then distillation of various fractions on the basis of different boiling points. By using this process, all the components of air can be separated out.
In homogenous reaction all the components/reactants taking part in the reaction form one single phase, with the reaction occurring in the bulk of this system. In heterogeneous reaction all the components/reactants taking part in the reaction are in different phases, with the reaction occurring between the delimiting surface of the components/reactants.
At normal temperature and pressure it is found in gaseous state as one of the components of air and it satisfies all the charasteristics of gases.
I don't know how you can differentiate between two same things. However I can tell you what homogeneous equilibrium is-If all the reactant and products are in the same phase then the reaction at equilibrium is in homogeneous equilibria.
All gases diffuse to a homogenous phase.
All multi-component gases are always homogenous: there's only one gas phase possible.
Yes. Pure air is a homogenous mixture. Air is a mixture of various kinds of gases. A mixture is said to be homogenous when all its constituents are in phase. Example, a mixture of water & milk is a homogenous mixture, as water & milk both are liquids & are in phase. Same is the case with pure air. All the constituents gases of pure air are in phase with each other. Hence its a homogenous mixture.
Homogenous.
Cooking gas is a homogenous mixture, usually of methane, ethane, and propane. Homogenous means you can't visually distinguish between the different components. All three of those gases are invisible, and they all mix at the molecular level (because they're all non-polar) so it's a homogenous mixture.
Homogeneous equilibrium occurs when all reactants and products are in the same physical state, such as all being in the gas phase or all being in solution. It is characterized by the forward and reverse reactions occurring at the same rate, resulting in a constant concentration of reactants and products. The equilibrium constant for homogeneous equilibria is defined based on concentrations of species in the same phase.
The ONLY characteristics of an equilibrium are:sort of reactants and products involvedconcentration of all components in the continuous phasetemperatureThe others are non-characteristic
The best process for the separation of components of air is fractional distillation of air. The process includes the liquefaction of air first and then distillation of various fractions on the basis of different boiling points. By using this process, all the components of air can be separated out.
Argon, oxygen and nitrogen are three elemental gases that are components of air, which is a mixture of these and other gases. They are all colourless, and non-metals.
In homogenous reaction all the components/reactants taking part in the reaction form one single phase, with the reaction occurring in the bulk of this system. In heterogeneous reaction all the components/reactants taking part in the reaction are in different phases, with the reaction occurring between the delimiting surface of the components/reactants.
yes