Simply dissolve in distilled water and filter out the salt solution. Now the residual thing is once again washed with distilled water and filtering. This process is repeated till the entire salt is removed right from rice. The advantage is that rice is insoluble in water
it is practically impossible to separate rice from salt
You can sift it with something-the rice is bigger so use something with holes just large enough to allow the salt to go through
Pour both through a sieve. The water would pass through the mesh, leaving the rice behind.
Water.
Table salt is NOT a mixture but a pure compound. It can not be separated.
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.
That depends on the interpretation of homogeneous and at what level you look at the statement/the rice. Can you have a mixture of just one thing? How many separate components are there in reality - water, salt, starch, protein, etc etc. etc., plus the air between the grains. I would argue that it is homogeneous as to me the word means uniform throughout, but I'd drop the word "mixture".
You get a small sive and place the mixture in there, then all the salt will come out
Water.
we can separate salt and sand by solving the mixture into water salt is soluble but sand is not .
rice from solution by filteration and salt by vaporising water .
Table salt is NOT a mixture but a pure compound. It can not be separated.
You Can't!
A sieve of the proper size will do it. As this is a mixture of the rice and salt, we should be able to separate them by mechanical means. Pour the stuff into the sieve, and bump it gently with the palm of the hand until all the salt falls through. That should leave the rice caught in the net.
by using rice as a filter
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.
One direction
yep
evaporation
By evaporation of the water and crystallization of the salt.