this is probably the best reply to your answer : http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/chem03/chem03115.htm Personally I think that reverse osmosis is the Most User-Friendly solution on the commercial market Good luck
Distill the salt water. What you have left will be fairly pure water, with salt residue concentrated at the bottom of the evaporator.
You can't once you put salt into water salt dissolves in the water and you cannot separate the salt.
Assuming that you're trying to separate the sand and the salt: adding water will dissolve the salt but it will keep the sand. So the sand can be separated by filtration and then the water can be evaporated leaving behind plain salt.
When a mixture of salt and water freeze, the two substances will not separate. The mixture will just become frozen salt water.
By evaporation of the water and crystallization of the salt.
You can simply separate salt and water by distillation method.
Yes. You can separate water from a salt solution by evaporation.
MAGIC
A hot plate will separate salt water.
Evaporate the water.
Sugar burns when it is heated to a very high temperature. Salt does not burn.
In order to separate salt from water, you need to boil the water. Once all of the water has evaporated, the salt will be at the bottom of the container the water was boiled in.
Assuming that you're trying to separate the sand and the salt: adding water will dissolve the salt but it will keep the sand. So the sand can be separated by filtration and then the water can be evaporated leaving behind plain salt.
No, it cannot separate salt from a salt solution. This is because salt is soluble in water.
To separate salt water into salt and fresh water you can use:a distillation apparatus, ora reverse osmosis process
You will have some salt and some fresh water.
Evaporating water dried salt is obtained.
A common process one can use to separate salt from water is distillation.
You boil the salt water so the water evaporates, leaving salt.