Want this question answered?
Yes!!!! Put the mixture in water. The Sugar will dissolve. The Sand will remain solid. Then filter. The sand will be trapped in the filter paper, and thr dissolved sugar will pass through the filter paper. The regain the sugar crystals., gently heat and evaporate the water of solution. and sugar crystals will reappear.
Use a magnet to separate the iron filings, filter the remaining sawdust and sugar water solution, evaporate the water from the sugar water solution.
No, because sugar is completely soluble in water. When sugar is dissolved in water , it completely breaks down so it can't be seperated from water by filter paper
You could dissolve the bulk material in water, then pass the solution through a filter paper. This will stop all the sand. The residual solution should be evaporated under a reduced air pressure, so as to avoid overheating the sugar when it crystallizes out.
No because when you pour the sugar in the water it will dissolve in to the water so if you try separating it with the filter paper it is water
Separate the sugar solution from the sand by passing the solution through a coarse paper filter. Or syphon off the sugar solution, leaving the sand behind.
Filter papers are only used to separe solids from a solution or from a gas. They cannot separate molecule of sugar from water, the pores are too big.
Salt does not desolve in pure grain alcohol. Put the mixture in the solution, then filter through filter paper or a coffee filter. then evaporate the alcohol and your left with salt in the filter and sugar in the other end.
Suger solution made with water is homogenous so,nothing left, seperate with filter paper .
No. You should use evaporation of the water to separate the sugar and water.
One method is to use a process called chromatography. This involves placing a sample of the mixture onto a piece of filter paper. The filter paper is then placed in a container of a liquid solvent such as water. The solvent travels up the paper, carrying the mixture with it. As the solvent travels up the paper, the different components in the mixture separate and move at different rates, allowing you to separate the starch and sugar.
Yes!!!! Put the mixture in water. The Sugar will dissolve. The Sand will remain solid. Then filter. The sand will be trapped in the filter paper, and thr dissolved sugar will pass through the filter paper. The regain the sugar crystals., gently heat and evaporate the water of solution. and sugar crystals will reappear.
No.
Perhaps the full question is how can one separate by filtration, a sugar and sand mixture.One answer is to thoroughly saturate the mixture, and run the liquid through a filter paper. The sugar solution will run through, but the sand will not pass.You may then recover the sugar by gentle evaporation of the liquid.
No it cant because suger dissolves into water
1. Put the mixture of powders in a beaker and add ethanol. 2. Stir vigorously. Sugar is dissolved, salt not. 3. Filter to separate sugar solution (passes the filter) from salt as a solid on the filter.
Use a magnet to separate the iron filings, filter the remaining sawdust and sugar water solution, evaporate the water from the sugar water solution.