Use a magnet to separate the iron,
Add the reaming mixture to water, the salt will dissolve, the pepper will float and the sand will sink- separate the pepper from the surface, filter the solution to retrieve the sand then evaporate the water to get the salt
Method A
Throw the whole lot in a container of water run the salty water and pepper through a filter paper or cloth. The pepper will be retained by the filter paper. Use an evaporating dish to evaporate the water to leave salt crystals.
Method B
Materials needed: Salt
Pepper
Balloon
Wool
comb
1. On a flat surface, mix a small amount of salt and pepper.
2. Inflate your balloon. Rub the piece of wool on your balloon to make it negatively charged.
3. Hold your negatively charged balloon and slowly bring it closer to your salt and pepper mixture. The pepper should be flying up and sticking onto your balloon, while the salt remains on the flat surface.
Variation on Method B
Take a plastic spoon and rub it thoroughly on your (cotton) shirt or any cotton piece of clothing you have. This creates friction. Both salt and pepper are attracted to this. But because pepper is lighter than salt, the pepper sticks and from there you can easily separate them.
1) Add the salt/pepper mixture into water
2) Allow the salt to dissolve
3) Pass the solution through a filter which is able to collect the undissolved pepper.
4) Boil the saltwater solution until all water has evapourated.
one method is you can put both the salt and pepper in some water and stir it to make the salt dissolve. find some way to recrystalize the salt and the result is the pepper will be left behind, thus separating the two:)
Well....the above answer is fine, except it ignores the sand in the mixture. So I would first of all blow all the pepper away with a good sneeze or a bit of compressed air, then follow the instructions above :))
You could put it trough a very fine item with small holes the pepper will sink through but the salt will be to big. Just keep shaking it lightly.
If you don't mind getting it wet ...
pepper floats on water, pebbles sink in water, and salt dissolves in water.
Salt is soluble in water, pepper not.
Salt dissolves in water, pepper doesn't. Filtration (followed by evaporation of the filtered liquid to recover the salt) should work.
You can use a seive
No. A mixture of salt and pepper is simply a mixture of salt and pepper. Silicon is an element unrelated to either salt or pepper.
First put the mixture in a colander and separate the salt and pepper from the pebbles. Then put the salt and pepper in water and stir it to dissolve the salt. The pepper will not dissolve, and you can remove the pepper. Then allow the water to dissolve and you will be left with the salt.
If you shake it, you can at least get a partial separation.
Table salt is NOT a mixture but a pure compound. It can not be separated.
Yes; specifically a mechanical mixture.
No, black pepper is not a pure substance. Instead, black pepper is what we call a mixture substance. However, salt is a pure substance.
No. A mixture of salt and pepper is simply a mixture of salt and pepper. Silicon is an element unrelated to either salt or pepper.
First put the mixture in a colander and separate the salt and pepper from the pebbles. Then put the salt and pepper in water and stir it to dissolve the salt. The pepper will not dissolve, and you can remove the pepper. Then allow the water to dissolve and you will be left with the salt.
Yes, salt and pepper together make a mixture. It is a heterogeneous mixture.
Salt is soluble in water, unlike pepper, so you can put the mixture in water and filter it using a coffee filter. The pepper will stay in the coffee filter and the salt can be separated from the water by leaving the solution in the sun.
If you shake it, you can at least get a partial separation.
One way is to put the mixture into water and heat it making the salt dissolve into the water. afterward, putting the water thru a strainer to remove the pepper and heating the salt water and making all the water boil out and just leaving your salt behind.
Add water to dissolve salt and skim the pepper from the top, drain and dry. I think you really are asking something else here. Just ask the real question.
yes it does
Mixing salt and pepper results in a MIXTURE, not a new compound.
- Put the mixture in water- The salt is dissolved and remain in solution- Filter- Dry the mixture- Extract iron with a magnet- Separate sand and pepper manually or by sieving (depending on the granulation) or exploit the difference of density upon floatingPut the mixture in waterPut the mixture in water and stir.Salt is easily dissolved.After filtering salt remain in solution.The dried mixture of pepper and sand can be separated manually, by sieving or exploiting the difference of densities on floating.Read more: How_can_a_mixture_of_sand_salt_and_pepper_be_separatedPut the mixture in water and stir.Salt is easily dissolved.After filtering salt remain in solution.The dried mixture of pepper and sand can be separated manually, by sieving or exploiting the difference of densities on floating.Read more: How_can_a_mixture_of_sand_salt_and_pepper_be_separatedPut the mixture in water and stir.Salt is easily dissolved.After filtering salt remain in solution.The dried mixture of pepper and sand can be separated manually, by sieving or exploiting the difference of densities on floating.Read more: How_can_a_mixture_of_sand_salt_and_pepper_be_separatedPut the mixture in water and stir.Salt is easily dissolved.After filtering salt remain in solution.The dried mixture of pepper and sand can be separated manually, by sieving or exploiting the difference of densities on floating.Read more: How_can_a_mixture_of_sand_salt_and_pepper_be_separatedPut the mixture in water and stir.Salt is easily dissolved.After filtering salt remain in solution.The dried mixture of pepper and sand can be separated manually, by sieving or exploiting the difference of densities on floating.Read more: How_can_a_mixture_of_sand_salt_and_pepper_be_separatedPut the mixture in water and stir.Salt is easily dissolved.After filtering salt remain in solution.The dried mixture of pepper and sand can be separated manually, by sieving or exploiting the difference of densities on floating.Read more: How_can_a_mixture_of_sand_salt_and_pepper_be_separated
If you mean salt & pepper in the same container, I would say heterogeneous mixture, but salt by itself would be a compount (NaCl?), while pepper would likely be a homogeneous mixture (milled black pepper).