Evaporate the water, which will leave the sugar behind.
Place the mixture of sand and sugar in warm water, then stir.Allow the sand to settle to the bottom, then remove using a sieve.Boil off the water and collect the sugar.
To separate a mixture of soil and sugar, you can use a method called filtration. Pass the mixture through a filter such as a sieve or filter paper. The sugar will dissolve in water, while the soil will remain behind as residue on the filter. The water containing the dissolved sugar can then be evaporated to recover the sugar.
To recover sucrose from a water solution containing sodium chloride, you can use evaporation to separate the two compounds. By boiling off the water, sucrose will remain as a solid residue while sodium chloride will stay dissolved. After evaporation, you can filter the solid sucrose from the remaining solution.
The solute.
The sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent. Whatever is dissolved is the solute, and whatever the solute is dissolved in is the solvent. The solvent dissolves the solute.
When sugar is dissolved in water, water is called a SOLVENT
No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.
When sugar is dissolved in water, it appears as a clear, transparent solution with no visible sugar particles.
To separate sugar and petrol, you can use a method called liquid-liquid extraction. Since sugar is soluble in water and petrol is not, you can dissolve the sugar in water, creating a sugar solution, while the petrol remains separate. After mixing, you can decant or filter the mixture to remove the petrol, leaving the sugar dissolved in the water. Finally, you can evaporate the water to recover the sugar.
It is sugar that is stirred and is dissolved faster than regular sugar.
Sugar is totally dissolved in water.
Also a taste of sugar !