It depends on what you're talking about. If you mean just the drink (no carbon dioxide) it's a solution because the substances in it can't really be separated. However, if you count the little fizzy bubbles, it then becomes a mechanical mixture because the liquid and gas can easily be separated.
Cola is a mixture (water, sugar, acid, plant extracts, color). Coca is the brand name, like Pepsi is.
Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola are homogeneous mixtures.
No, Coca-Cola is not a homogeneous mixture. It is a solution made up of various ingredients such as water, sugar, carbon dioxide, caffeine, and flavorings. These components are not uniformly distributed throughout the mixture.
Yes, Coca-Cola is a mixture.
It would be Coca Cola.
For example drinks as wine, beer, Coca-Cola, etc.
It has various ingredients dissolved in water which makes it a solution. The recipe is 'secret'.
Yes, Coca Cola is a compound because it is made up of multiple elements, such as carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, that are chemically bonded together to form the different molecules that give it its flavor and properties.
Coca Cola Vanilla is a product. Coca Cola is a brand.
It was Coca Cola
You will not find a Lewis dot structure for Coca Cola as it is a complex mixture of various compounds and not a single pure substance with a defined molecular structure like a simple molecule.
You could boil Coca Cola and when all the water is gone, see if there is some solid residue left in the container. If so, that must have been dissolved in the Coca Cola, thus proving that it was a solution. Even the observation of bubbles forming in Coca Cola (at temperatures too low for boiling of water) in itself proves that some gas (carbon dioxide, as it happens) is dissolved in the liquid and is bubbling out of it.