It can be separated by using evaporation or a distillation apparatus. The water would be put into steam a and would draw away from the Erlenmeyer Flask. While farther away. The steam would turn back into water while putting the sugar back into its crystalline form.
You could evaporate the water from the sugar. Or, if you want to capture the water, you could boil the solution, condense the water vapor, and capture it in a beaker or flask, similar to distillation.
Yes, it is possible; water is evaporated and sugar remain as crystals.
Yes. Heat it and the water boils off.
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a physical reacton
ANSWER:A physical change. Nothing new is made from the solution and they both can be separated later by using heat to evaporate the water, leaving the sugar behind.
Water cannot be separated into hydrogen and oxygen by boiling. Boiling is a physical change which means the molecule doesn't change at all--liquid water and water vapor are both H2O. Water can be separated into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity, this would be a chemical change.
Yes it can. Water, table salt, and sugar are all examples of compounds and can all be decomposed into simpler substances through physical means.^^ I believed that water and table salt would be a mixture, mixtures are the non-chemical means not compounds, with compounds there is a chemical change.
The Physical change occurs when the sugar dissolves into the water. The Sugar is no longer there which has been a physical change from when it occurred.
a physical reacton
It can be separated by physical means, so therefore it is a mixture.
Yes. The water can be evaporated, leaving behind the sugar.
It's a molecule than cannot be separated in to to constituent elements by physical means.
ANSWER:A physical change. Nothing new is made from the solution and they both can be separated later by using heat to evaporate the water, leaving the sugar behind.
Sugar is soluble in water.
Water cannot be separated into hydrogen and oxygen by boiling. Boiling is a physical change which means the molecule doesn't change at all--liquid water and water vapor are both H2O. Water can be separated into hydrogen and oxygen using electricity, this would be a chemical change.
Sugar and water are separated by crystallisation. Though there are other methods this is the easy and obvious one.
You can evaporate the water and recover the sugar unchanged. A chemical change means a chemical reaction has taken place and changed the substance chemically. A physical change means that a solid has become a liquid such as dissolving sugar.
Sugar and water can be separated by using a couple different methods. One method is by using an apparatus for distillation. Another is by using evaporation.
Yes it can. Water, table salt, and sugar are all examples of compounds and can all be decomposed into simpler substances through physical means.^^ I believed that water and table salt would be a mixture, mixtures are the non-chemical means not compounds, with compounds there is a chemical change.
Sugar dissolving would be an example of a physical change. This is because it does not change chemically, so it is still sugar.