It is a mixture but not a true solution.
No
sugar is a covalent compound formed by covalent bonding (C6H12O6). covalent compounds are usually soluble in organic compounds and insoluble in water, hence sugar does not dissolve well in water.
Stuff dissolving is known as solubility (usually expressed as grams/Liter) Recall that salt (I'm assuming you're referring to table salt) is an ionic compound, namely NaCl. NaCl ionizes in water to from Na+ and Cl- and is very soluble. Sugar, is an organic compound that is very large. It isn't very soluble, and thus won't dissolve as well in water as does salt.
NO
Yes, rice paper will dissolve in water. If you do a quick Google search you will see many people saying it will and some saying if you get it wet, it dissolves. Previous person who answered is incorrect.
Ionic compounds are highly soluble in water as compare to covalent compounds, while NaCl is an ionic compound and sugar is a covalent compound therefore NaCl dissolves faster than sugar.........Nadia Ali
Because of the chemical inside it, i forgot wat its called.. soz im onli 11 xD
Sugar will dissolve in water upto the point when the water becomes 'saturated' with sugar, then no more sugar will dissolve.
No I did an experiment today and sand and rice do not dissolve water
- Sand does not dissolve in water- Plastic does not dissolve in water- metals do not dissolve in water
salt and sugar will dissolve in water while sand and baby powder will not dissolve
No, not at all. In fact most solids are INsoluble. Some solids (such as metals, stones, wood) don't dissolve while other solids like sugar or salt do dissolve. Water is a polar molecule, therefore it can dissolve only polar substances and many ionic compounds. However, it cannot dissolve non-polar substances.
Solution = a solute (something to dissolve) and solvent (the one who makes the other dissolve) Water and Ice: Same thing. It wouldn't help to melt the ice. It's just more H2O. Water and Oil: This wouldn't work. The oil would literally "sit" on top of the water. Water and Sand: Sand is is SiO2 which is nonpolar and also wouldn't dissolve in water. (Which is good! If it DID dissolve in water, we wouldn't have beaches!) Water and Salt: YES! Salt is a polar molecule, as is water, so the water would dissolve salt and create a solution.
Assuming that you're trying to separate the sand and the salt: adding water will dissolve the salt but it will keep the sand. So the sand can be separated by filtration and then the water can be evaporated leaving behind plain salt.
No. It does not dissolve in water at any temperature.
No. The sand does not dissolve.
No. The sand does not dissolve.
Sand will not dissolve in water.
Salt will dissolve in water
Soluble means something will dissolve. Sand does not dissolve in water, salt does.
- Sand does not dissolve in water- Plastic does not dissolve in water- metals do not dissolve in water
the sand and salt will dissolve in the water
no
Sand, or silicon oxide, is fairly inert. It does not dissolve in water. Sand is mostly the same material as glass. So it does not dissolve any faster than glass dissolves in cold water. Hydrofluoric acid is, however, another matter.
Yes. Sand doesn't dissolve in water..... evaporating the water by heating the sample - will produce the sand.
Salt will dissolve in water, and the more heat you add, the more salt you can dissolve, i.e. boiling the water. Sand however, is not water soluble, therefore, it will not dissolve. Let the water boil and dissolve the salt, then drain the water over a semi-permeable cloth so the sand is trapped and the water (and salt) drains through.