NO! only by boiling points my friend.
Heterogeneous mixtures are mixtures that can easily be separated. For instance, sand mixed with water is a heterogeneous mixture that can be separated by filtration. Another example of a heterogeneous mixture is salt mixed with pebbles, which can be separated by adding water to the mixture.
The dissolved salt will go right through. Anything dissolved in water can't be separated out using filter paper. However, if you evaporate off the water, the salt remains in the container, and you can separate it that way.
Mixtures that have a solute that is more soluble at high temperatures and less soluble at low temperatures can be separated by crystallization. As the mixture cools, the solute will start to crystallize out of the solution, allowing it to be separated from the solvent. Examples include salt dissolved in water or sugar dissolved in water.
Salt, sugar, and water are all mixtures. A mixture is a combination of two or more substances that are physically intermingled but retain their individual properties. In the case of salt sugar and water, each component can be separated by physical means, such as filtration or evaporation.
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.
Add more water until all the salt dissolves. Filter this mixture. The sand will be on the filter. Dry this out and sand will be left. Take the salt water and evaporate the water off and dry salt will be left. Condense the water from the evaporation and water is recovered too.
1. Put this mixture in water and stir. 2. Filter the suspension on paper filter or other type of filter. 3. The sand remain on the filter and the salt in the filtrate.
water and sand there is dissolved sugar or salt with sand
You mix them into water, filter the sand using a beaker and filter paper, and evaporate the water left over which leaves the salt. HOPE THIS HELPS! XXX Yeah, just make sure that the salt has dissolved in the water!
what kind of mixtures? mixing salt and sugar? salt and sand? but if you're a middle school chemistry student, then the answer ought to be yes.
Salt water is a homogeneous mixture. Salt, however, is a compound. It has its own properties different from the original elements that created it. It was chemically combined and can only be separated by those means.
Sand and salt can be separated using filter paper and a funnel because salt dissolves in water, while sand does not. When the mixture is added to water and stirred, the salt will dissolve, leaving the sand behind. By pouring the mixture through filter paper in a funnel, the sand is trapped on the paper while the salt solution passes through, allowing for the separation of the two components.