No. At least, not from anything where the separation is non-trivial. You could separate it from liquid Mercury that way.
Methylated spirit is ethanol as is volatile at room temperature
Using the separating funnel method can be separated mixtures of liquids with different densities.
The first investigation question is, why are you comparing the evaporation rates of ethanol and methylated spirit? One of the most important things to know about methylated spirit is it's made so it can't be demethylated. This for several reasons, largely because alcohol beverage taxes are not levied on methylated spirit as they are on drinkable ethanol; if you could demethylate spirit then people would never buy booze, they'd just buy methylated spirit and fix it. One of their safeguards is to use an agent that evaporates at the same rate as ethanol (methanol, usually, which is where the name used in England comes from). This keeps people from distilling it.
because it will evaporates
only suspended particles are filtered
effact of methylated spirit on the human body
I don't remember any purpose oh methylated spirit in the making of soap.
to change
yes
A methylated spirit
You'd need to specify what the methylated spirit is doing. Burning? Condensing from vapor?
V (VOLUME) = M (MASS) / D (DENSITY) All you have to do is to find the density of methylated spirit and use the formula
Spirit > water > milk
Yes I believe it does!
No. I recently did an experiment where we had to put salt in methylated spirits and it didn't dissolve. Most things can't dissolve in methylated spirits.
It's a type of alcoholic drink
Yes it does.