1. Magnesium hydroxide
2. Nonpolar molecules
3. Polar molecules
4. Insoluble ionic solid
5. C12H22O11
6. Dihydrogen dioxide
7. Any ionic fluoride
8. Compound containing an alkali Metal
9. Compound containing a halogen
10. compound containing alkaline earth metal
11. An irradiated food
12. Anything to separate a mixture
13. Something containing tungsten
14. Something that would lower the freezing point of water
15. An element whose common oxidation numbers in a compound are +2 or +3
16. Strong electrolyte
17. Weak electrolyte
18. Nonelectrolyte
19. Heterogenous mixture
20. A suspension
21. Dissociated ions metallic element
22. Material containing a metalloid
23. Substance containing element 83
24. Sodium lauryl sulfate
25. Something containing titanium oxide
26. A volatile liquid
2. Nonpolar molecules
3. Polar molecules
4. Insoluble ionic solid
5. C12H22O11
6. Dihydrogen dioxide
7. Any ionic fluoride
8. Compound containing an alkali Metal
9. Compound containing a halogen
10. compound containing alkaline earth metal
11. An irradiated food
12. Anything to separate a mixture
13. Something containing tungsten
14. Something that would lower the freezing point of water
15. An element whose common oxidation numbers in a compound are +2 or +3
16. Strong electrolyte
17. Weak electrolyte
18. Nonelectrolyte
19. Heterogenous mixture
20. A suspension
21. Dissociated ions metallic element
22. Material containing a metalloid
23. Substance containing element 83
24. Sodium lauryl sulfate
25. Something containing titanium oxide
26. A volatile liquid
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.
1. antacids
2. cooking oils and fats or the teflon coating on a frypan
3. water
4. copper silicide(Cu5Si) , mercury
5. disaccharides; cellobiose, allolactose etc...
6. hydrogen peroxide(H2O2); in living systems, or hair bleach
7. drinking water contains fluride
8. battery , or NaCl(salt)
9. table salt(NaCl)
10. calcium compounds;
11. fruits, spices, canned meat
12. what kind of mixture? how about a non-polar solvent to separate solutes out of aqueous phase ie cyclohexane
13. many tools are tungsten tipped for hardness
14. salt, ie salt water doesnt freeze in the arctic (well it does but much lower temp)
15. Fe (iron) has these
16. salts with full dissociation like NaCl MgCl2
17. carboxylic acid with low dissociation ie vinegar
18. sugar (sucrose)
19. oil & water
20. mud, fog, clouds, cake mixtures
21. {i dont get the question but it could be mercury or somethin}
22. silicon compounds; glass, computer chips
23. element 83 is bismuth which is used in cosmeics
24. detergents for laundry, bubble bath, shampoo, toothpaste; isolated from coconut/palms
25. sunscreen
26. technically anything that evaporates so water, but petrol is a safer bet
.
1. antacids
2. cooking oils and fats or the teflon coating on a frypan
3. water
4. copper silicide(Cu5Si) , mercury
5. disaccharides; cellobiose, allolactose etc...
6. hydrogen peroxide(H2O2); in living systems, or hair bleach
7. drinking water contains fluride
8. battery , or NaCl(salt)
9. table salt(NaCl)
10. calcium compounds;
11. fruits, spices, canned meat
12. what kind of mixture? how about a non-polar solvent to separate solutes out of aqueous phase ie cyclohexane
13. many tools are tungsten tipped for hardness
14. salt, ie salt water doesnt freeze in the arctic (well it does but much lower temp)
15. Fe (iron) has these
16. salts with full dissociation like NaCl MgCl2
17. carboxylic acid with low dissociation ie vinegar
18. sugar (sucrose)
19. oil & water
20. mud, fog, clouds, cake mixtures
21. {i dont get the question but it could be mercury or somethin}
22. silicon compounds; glass, computer chips
23. element 83 is bismuth which is used in cosmeics
24. detergents for laundry, bubble bath, shampoo, toothpaste; isolated from coconut/palms
25. sunscreen
26. technically anything that evaporates so water, but petrol is a safer bet
.