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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.
A simple filter would be suitable for separating sand and water. An alternative would be to evaporate the water, leaving the sand behind.
Simply,just get a filter paper add this mixture and as sand is insoluble in water it will be collected in the filter paper as a residue (it will not pass).However the water will pass as a filtrate so we can now take these two separately
evaporation of the water. Water boils at a relatively low temp. sand does not, so sand would be left behind.
I dont know but i believe it is crystallization.
Pour water into the mixture, let the salt dissolve.Then, put the wet-salty water-sand mixture through a sifter/filter.Take out the sand from the filter and dry it. COMPONENT 1 - SANDBoil the salt water solution and evaporate the water. The residue will be salt. COMPONENT 2 SALTDissolve the mixture in water first, before filtering the resultant solution. The residue is the sand, while the filtrate is the salt solution.
Meshes and sand sieves are used to separate insoluble (non dissolvable) particles from contaminated water (eg. lake, sea water) in preparation for further treatment. An answer by a 13 year old girl :)
To separate gold from sand
Sieving is an adequate method.
Use a magnet to remove the iron, a filter or screen to remove the sand, and a still to remove the salt.
evaporation is used to separate sugar and water.
This sounds like a physical separation question where the student receives a beaker of sand and salt or sand and sugar and is asked to separate the two substances. The technique is to filter the mixture with water. The sand stays in the funnel, but the salt or sugar crystals dissolve in the water and are pulled through to the flask below. If you need to separate the salt or sugar from the water used for filtration, use a hotplate and evaporation dish to boil away the water.