Combine the mixture with water, the salt will dissolve leaving sand and a saline solution, filter out the sand with filter paper or by vacuum desiccation, take the saline solution distill it through a condenser pipe. Hope that helps
You could separate it by adding water to the salt and water then you should filter off the sand and lastly you should evaporate the added water from the clear filtrate. The sand will stay on the filter whereas the salt is left over when the water is evaporated.
use a magnet...hold the magnet above it and the iron filings will attatch to it...
first u have2heat the mixture,wax will turn in2 gas...u have2 collect the gas in a jar.finally,if u freeze the gas,u`ll get wax&sand separated.......
Mix with water, evaporate and then feliter
Each of the three substances have a trait that makes them unique from the other two. By using this trait, you can seeperate them from each other. The wax, for example, has a low melting point. The salt will dissolve in water. If you start by heating the wax-sand-salt mix, until it has liquefied, then put it into boiling water, the wax should float, the salt should dissolve, and the sand should sink. As long as you can mix the wax around enough in a semi-liquid state to get the salt and sand free, you should be good.
candle wax is a mixture
Wax is a generally considered as a homogenous mixture of several different longer-chain alkanes, esters and other compounds.
it is made of multiple compounds...
Filteration
You could wash the sand and collect the water which comes off. Or soak the sand in a bowl of water. Then remove the sand. Maybe strain it in an old pair of tights. Then evaporate the water off and you will be left with the salt.
Each of the three substances have a trait that makes them unique from the other two. By using this trait, you can seeperate them from each other. The wax, for example, has a low melting point. The salt will dissolve in water. If you start by heating the wax-sand-salt mix, until it has liquefied, then put it into boiling water, the wax should float, the salt should dissolve, and the sand should sink. As long as you can mix the wax around enough in a semi-liquid state to get the salt and sand free, you should be good.
candle wax is a mixture
Wax is a generally considered as a homogenous mixture of several different longer-chain alkanes, esters and other compounds.
Well that depends on where you go in the world to watch a race. Here is a list of track surfaces around the world, even though they sound the same they have different inventors/developers: CushionTrack- silica sand, rubber, fibres and wax TapetaTrack- wax-coated mixture of sand, rubber and fiber PolyTrack- sand, synthetic fibers and rubber in a wax coating Dirt Track- Sand Track- Turf Track- artificial grass Joan Cowin.
melt the wax
Melt the wax and use a net like substance to separate the wax and then wash the rice to remove the liquid wax stick to the rice
Melt the wax and use a net like substance to separate the wax and then wash the rice to remove the liquid wax stick to the rice
Candle wax is a hydrogenated oil compound
Five examples of a mechanical mixture include:Cereal (milk and solids);Oil and water;Soda pop (liquid and Carbon Dioxide gas);Quicksand (sand and water);Lava lamps (wax and mineral oil).
No, paraffin wax is a mixture of hydrocarbons
Wax is a generally considered as a homogenous mixture of several different longer-chain alkanes, esters and other compounds.