Distillation would be the most effective method.
In this manner, you can obtain both the distillate and the residue.
Yes. You can separate water from a salt solution by evaporation.
If the solution only consists of dissolved salt and water, the answer is simple, just use evaportation, water goes, salt stays.
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
Salt water is a solution (when one substance is evenly mixed into another liquid [usually water] e.g. sugar water), and to separate a solution is a pot or bowl and a fire or stove. Simply boil the water, wait for it to evaporate and you have salt.
First filter the solution to seprate sand.then evapourate it and get salt.
Yes
Boiling off the water from a salt solution will separate the solid salt and water (which can be collected by a condenser).
Boil away the water and the salt will be left.
No, it cannot separate salt from a salt solution. This is because salt is soluble in water.
You boil the salt water so the water evaporates, leaving salt.
You can use evaporation to separate salt from a solution of salt and water.
Destiling or reverse osmosis.
Yes. You can separate water from a salt solution by evaporation.
rice from solution by filteration and salt by vaporising water .
Boil the water off. It leaves the salt behind.
If the solution only consists of dissolved salt and water, the answer is simple, just use evaportation, water goes, salt stays.
You heat it hot enough to evaporate the water and end up with salt.