You have to pick them up
You can separate sand and iron marbles using a magnet. The iron marbles will be attracted to the magnet, allowing you to separate them from the sand.
Sand and marbles would not be a solution. A solution has a solute (a solid) and a solvent (a liquid). You must also not be able to just separate the two. Sand and marbles would not be a solution because you can simply pick out the marbles, and there is no solvent!
Yes, water can be used to separate sand and sugar. Sugar will dissolve in water, while sand will not. By adding water to the mixture, the sugar will dissolve and can be separated from the sand by filtration or evaporation.
Soluble in water, sand is not.
to separate the mixture of sand and sugar:- first: you can mix water in it and after mixing you can separate the water and sand. and after that you boil the water until whole water is evaporated and you get sugar and sand separated. second: if difference b/w size of sugar and sand particle you can use met to separate them.
Separate the sugar solution from the sand by passing the solution through a coarse paper filter. Or syphon off the sugar solution, leaving the sand behind.
To separate sand from sugar and wood chips, you can use a combination of sieving and filtration. First, sieve the mixture to separate sand from sugar and wood chips. Then, use filtration to separate sugar from wood chips, as sugar can be dissolved in water while wood chips cannot.
It depends on what is in the mixture. If it's cake batter with flour, sugar, salt, butter, etc. then yeh it's basically impossible. But if it's a mixture of marbles and sand then you can easily separate those.
Put them in water. Sugar dissolves, sand remains Filter the solution to separate sand and salt. Evaporate solution with dissolved salt to get salt back
To separate nickel, sugar, and sand from a mixture, you can use a combination of physical methods. First, use a magnet to attract and remove the nickel, as it is magnetic. Then, dissolve the sugar in water to separate it from the sand, which does not dissolve. Finally, filter the sand from the sugar-water solution using a filtration process, leaving you with separate components.
To separate sugar and sand from water, you can use the process of filtration. Pour the sugar and sand mixture through filter paper or a fine sieve to capture the solid particles, while the water passes through. The sugar and sand can then be rinsed with more water to further separate them.
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