Today in Chemistry, my teacher was teaching us about elements, compounds and mixtures, and he gave examples of Homogeneous and Heterogeneous mixtures. The thing is, I'm not quite sure whether his examples were valid or not.
He said that air and sea water was homogeneous. I asked him about those examples, but he rambled on and on about something, before changing an example under Heterogeneous to Marmalade >.> Now I'm not an expert or anything, but homogeneous means that any sample taken from the mixture will be the same, since the particles are uniformly distributed, right?
The air gets thinner when you go higher, due to the smaller amount of oxygen molecules and other gases right? Polluting gases can also be in some areas, but not in others. Therefore, the particles in air aren't uniformly distributed.
In sea water, different locations in the world would have varying levels of pollution, such as more dissolved carbon dioxide or oxygen in some areas, not to mention different minerals from rocks in the water. Therefore, the particles in sea water are also not uniformly distributed.
So why was air and sea water classified as homogeneous, and not heterogeneous? Or was the teacher/teaching material being retarded? Sorry if this sounds like such a small thing to fuss over, but I don't want to be screwed over in an exam if a question like this comes up. :\
He said that air and sea water was homogeneous. I asked him about those examples, but he rambled on and on about something, before changing an example under Heterogeneous to Marmalade >.> Now I'm not an expert or anything, but homogeneous means that any sample taken from the mixture will be the same, since the particles are uniformly distributed, right?
The air gets thinner when you go higher, due to the smaller amount of oxygen molecules and other gases right? Polluting gases can also be in some areas, but not in others. Therefore, the particles in air aren't uniformly distributed.
In sea water, different locations in the world would have varying levels of pollution, such as more dissolved carbon dioxide or oxygen in some areas, not to mention different minerals from rocks in the water. Therefore, the particles in sea water are also not uniformly distributed.
So why was air and sea water classified as homogeneous, and not heterogeneous? Or was the teacher/teaching material being retarded? Sorry if this sounds like such a small thing to fuss over, but I don't want to be screwed over in an exam if a question like this comes up. :\
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