Remove the sugar
yeah... u can reverse the process n get the salt/sugar back...
Among salt, sugar, water and lemonade, only lemonade is a mixture.
it is a physical change,as dissolving just reduces the size of sugar or salt crystals and it does not change the property of it,for a chemical change ,change of composition is ncessary
It's a physical change because salt stays the same when it is put in the water. Even though you can not see the salt, it's still there. This will also happen if you put sugar in water.
No. Salt and sugar are combined all the time in cooking, and no cocaine is formed. In addition to have a different structure from sugar and salt, Cocaine contains nitrogen, which is not found in salt or sugar. Cocaine is derived from the coca plant, and has nothing to do with salt and sugar.
No, mixing sugar and chocolate is not a chemical change. It's a physical change.
yeah... u can reverse the process n get the salt/sugar back...
Test for sugar with Benidict's solution... if it doesn't change color, It is not sugar if it does it is!!!! :)
Yes, but it will take a different solvent than water or a chemical reaction that causes either the sugar or salt to undergo a chemical change.
Dissolving sugar or table salt in water is purely a Physical change
By dissolving something in it, like salt or sugar.
salt suger = sugar salt suger = sugar salt suger = sugar salt suger = sugar
Among salt, sugar, water and lemonade, only lemonade is a mixture.
Salt - maximum change in melting point.
it is a physical change,as dissolving just reduces the size of sugar or salt crystals and it does not change the property of it,for a chemical change ,change of composition is ncessary
dissolving sugar or even salt in water is a physical change, because the salt or sugar is no longer in the gradual form it was in before it was put in the water
Its not a chemical change when you see the salt dissolving because if your were to put something else like sugar then it would be a chemical.