Yes. You could try melting it over a Bunsen burner - the sugar will melt readily whereas the salt will not. You could also try dissolving the substance in alcohol. The salt will dissolve only very slightly, but the sugar will dissolve readily.
Remove the sugar
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.
The variable for both sugar and salt is temperature: more sugar or salt will dissolve in water at a higher temperature. The amount of water is also a factor, since more water will be able to dissolve more sugar or salt.
Salt is.
sugar
salt suger = sugar salt suger = sugar salt suger = sugar salt suger = sugar
Remove the sugar
No, sugar doesn't contain salt.
Salt and sugar doesn't react.
Salt and sugar have different chemical appearences and shapes. Their taste is also different!
Salt is much more polar than sugar. Salt is in fact ionic. Sugar is organic.
Salt and sugar are things, hence, they use the pronoun it. Do you have any salt? No, we are out of it.
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.
sugar and salt Sugar, salt
Based on observing salt is more crystalize than sugar
A mixture of salt and sugar can be separated by using an organic solvent to dissolve the sugar. When the sugar is dissolved, it can be separated by filtering the salt from the liquid sugar,then recrystallise both solutions to from back their original crystals.
Sugar and salt doesn't evaporate; the water from a sugar or salt solution is evaporating !