1. Put the mixture in water and stir.
2. Salt is water soluble, sand not.
3. Filter the suspension: sand remain on the filter and the salt in solution.
Salt is soluble in water.Sulfur is soluble in carbon disulfide.Sand is insoluble.
we can separate salt and sand by solving the mixture into water salt is soluble but sand is not .
How would you separate a mixture of table salt, sand, and talcum powder? - Quora. Throw the mixture in a sieve that'll let the talc through, but will block the salt and sand grains. Of course this only works if neither the salt nor sand are dust-sized particles. Shake the sieve over a bowl.
Place the mixture in water and separate the sand from the water if you want the salt. alow the water to evaporate, and you have salt and sand separated.
Sulfur is dissolved in carbon disulfide and extracted.Sodium chloride is soluble in water. After filtration sand remain on the filter.
One direction
Put the mixture in water and wait for all of the salt to dissolve. Then filter out the sand and wait for the water to evaporate in the sand/water solution to get the sand and salt separately.
Lets say you have mixture of sand and salt. Put your mixture on a filter paper and by using a strong magnet you should be able to separate sand from salt. Using a magnet is a powerful way to separate out one solid from another in a mixture.
toilet paper
First heat the mixture; the iodine will sublime and turn to a vapor which can be collected. Then add water to the remaining salt/sand mixture; the salt will dissolve but the sand will not. Finally, evaporate the water to obtain the solid salt.
Firstly, sift the mixture to separate the gravel from the sand and salt. Now place the sifted mixture into water. The sand will sink to the bottom and the salt will eventually dissolve. Pour this watery mixture through filter paper to catch all of the sand. If you want the salt back in solid form, simply boil the water.
First heat the mixture; the iodine will sublime and turn to a vapor which can be collected. Then add water to the remaining salt/sand mixture; the salt will dissolve but the sand will not. Finally, evaporate the water to obtain the solid salt.