Science Forums: Is homogenized milk homogeneous or heterogenerous? - Science Forums

Jump to content

Welcome to ScienceForums.Net!

Welcome to ScienceForums.Net! We welcome science discussion at all levels — from beginners to researchers, covering topics from biology to computer science, and much more. Registration is fast and free, and allows you to post on the forums, so register now and join the discussions!
  
After you've registered, come in and introduce yourself, or visit the forum index. If you need any help  registering, posting, or if you just have some questions about our site, please feel free to contact us at staff at scienceforums dot net.

  • Start new topics and reply to others
  • Subscribe to topics and forums to get automatic updates
  • Create a ScienceForums.Net Blog!
Guest Message © 2012 DevFuse

Homework Help Rules

A simple reminder to all: this is the "Homework Help" forum, not the "Homework Answers" forum. We will not do your work for you, only point you in the right direction. Posts that do give the answers may be removed.
Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

Is homogenized milk homogeneous or heterogenerous? Rate Topic: -----

#1 Banks 


Quark
Ok, interesting question.

"Fresh milk separates spontaneously into cream, which floats to the surface with watery below. Homogenized milk is made by breaking the cream into tiny droplets and mixing them into the rest of the milk. This prevents the cream from separating. Is homogenized milk homogeneous or heterogeneous?"

How do I determine this?

....Ok, I think i got it.

It's homogeneous. Because of the tiny droplets and mixing them into the rest of the milk makes it homogeneous, which is clearly not visible. Therefore, it's homogeneous.

If it wasn't broken down into tiny droplets and mixing them, it would be heterogeneous.

Am I right?

I pray to God I'm right.....

According to my textbook -

heterogeneous mixture - mixture in which the different substances are visible

homogeneous mixture - mixture in which the different substances are not visible

So, it has to be homogeneous because according to the original question, all the substances in it look the same.

You cannot tell what substances in the homogenized milk are, especially one by one.

According to textbook -

"In some mixtures, the separate components are not visible. These are solutions. They are called homogeneous mixtures because they look the same throughout. In a solution, one substance is dissolved in another. For example, a soft drink is a solution composed mainly of sugar dissolved in water."

Another question,

"Find out whether homogenized milk is a suspension, a colloid, or a solution"

I picked colloid, because it's similar to a suspension, but the suspended substance cannot be easily separated from the other substance.
Thanks guys!
0

#2 Cap'n Refsmmat 


Icon
Mr. Wizard
I believe you're right that milk is a colloid. Based on your textbook's definition of homogeneous, I'd agree with you, but the distinction is somewhat arbitrary.
Cap'n Refsmmat
SFN Administrator

Get in the chatroom!
0

Share this topic:


Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users