sieve
may be more than one, with increasing mesh fineness
Place the mixture in water and separate the sand from the water if you want the salt. alow the water to evaporate, and you have salt and sand separated.
Add water, separate the water from the sand. Let the water evaporate.
Since salt is soluble in water then you have to separate the mixture from sand first and this is done by filtration. The sand will be left in the filter paper and the filtererd solution would be that of salt and water. To get the salt you would then have to heat the solution and the water will evaporate leaving the salt behind.Filter Paper
Sure, that's easy. First, pull out the iron filings with a magnet. Separate the pebbles by pouring the mixture through a grate, with holes large enough to allow the sand and salt to fall through, but not large enough to allow the pebbles to fall through. Finally, to separate the sand and the salt, just add water. The salt will dissolve, the sand won't. If you want to recover the salt in solid form, you can then boil away the water in the salt solution, and get your salt back. Done.
mix the salt and sand into a glass of water. The sand would settle at the bottom of the glass, and the salt would dissolve into the water. pour off the salt water, wait for the water to evaporate, and you will be left with salt, and sand.
salt is soluble in water. Hence, it gets dissolved. But sand does not dissolve. sand is filtered out and salt is obtained by evaporating the remaining part of mixture.
we can separate salt and sand by solving the mixture into water salt is soluble but sand is not .
you pick out the stones, secondly you have to use filtering to pick out the sand and just leave the sugar.
Salt is soluble in water, sand is not soluble; filter the solution.
Place the mixture in water and separate the sand from the water if you want the salt. alow the water to evaporate, and you have salt and sand separated.
water
filtration
Put them in water. Sugar dissolves, sand remains Filter the solution to separate sand and salt. Evaporate solution with dissolved salt to get salt back
In solution, the salt will be dissolved in the water, the sand and iron will settle to the bottom of the container. Separate out the water, evaporate the water and the salt will remain, separate the sand and iron filings with a magnet.
You can separate them by filtration and it would help because when you add water the sand would stay because you would have to add cold water so that the sand will stay and the salt will go through.
In solution, the salt will be dissolved in the water, the sand and iron will settle to the bottom of the container. Separate out the water, evaporate the water and the salt will remain, separate the sand and iron filings with a magnet.
Use a sieve to remove the paper clips and small stones. Heat the remaining solution until the water evaporates (which is recovered by condensation). This will leave the salt behind.