Water being evaporated salts remain as residues.
There is no chemical reaction. In maple syrup the sugar is dissolved in water. When the water evaporates the sugar comes out of solution and forms crystals.
when water evaporates, as in a dry climate, ions that are left behind can come together to form crystals like the halite crystals. Or if too much of a substance is dissolved in water, ions can come together and crystals of that substance can begin to for in the solution.
If a substance can be dissolved in water, that substance said to be water soluble.
The sugar crystals are dissolved in water and poured through a series of filters until the liquid is clear. The syrup is heated so the liquid evaporates leaving crystals again. The crystals are spun in a centrifuge
it evaporates with the water
the water evaporates leaving salt crystal
Halite is rock salt. Even some fresh water lakes have Na+ and Cl- dissolved in them, so I would guess that yes, some halite forms. But probably not all that much compared to a salt lake evaporating.
desicated
No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.
The water in the salt water evaporates, leaving a dry residue of salt crystals.
Precipitation causes dissolved substances to be left behind to form minerals after water in lakes or ponds evaporates.
The sugar crystals have no added colour and are 'white' crystals in appearance. Once dissolved into the water, they create a transparent sugary solution. The same is for salt crystals that create a saline solution.