Well, first you place the mixture in water and then the sodium chloride will start to dissolve, but the sand and sulfur will not. Next, you drain the water and place the sand/sulfur mix into cold carbon disulfide, which dissolves sulfur. You're left with plain sand.
Finally, you do your chemistry homework yourself.
you can just use evaporation or some monkeys have fun farting everywhere : sieve ,magnet, hand, filters ,floaters/sinkers and evaporation. well that's what i use to separate mixtures & solutions
Very simple: by the evaporation of water.
Evaporating the water.
By filtration: sodium chloride is soluble in water, sand is not soluble.
Sand and sodium chloride are not separated by distillation.
After the dissolution of the mixture in water the separation is possible by filtration.
sodiume
Sodium chloride is soluble in water.
They separate at the boiling point of water, 100o Celsius, because the water boils away and the sodium chloride is left behind.
Sodium Chloride dissolved in water will form sodium but sodium reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, molten sodium chloride will do it .
Evaporating the water crystallized sodium chloride is obtained.
Sodium chloride is soluble in water and carbon not.
Because metallic sodium reacts quickly and violently with water.
At any temperature over 0 0C water is evaporated and sodium chloride remain as crystals.
Dissolve the mixture in water. The precipitate is lead chloride. By filtering the solution and followed by evaporation, sodium chloride can be extracted.
After the sodium chloride dissolves in the water, the mixture can be filtered and the carbon residue then rinsed with clean water and allowed to dry. The sodium chloride will reform as solid crystals after the water has evaporated from the filtrate.
Water is deleted by heating and evaporation.
first, add water to the mixture, barium chloride is soluble in water. then filter through and funnel and filter funnel. then add sodium sulphate, using the stove they will expand and separate. ( sodium cloride, and sand
Dissolve the sodium chloride(which is actually salt) in water. Then, filter the calcium carbonate with the help of filter paper. Crystallize the solution of sodium chloride with water... Hope this helps! :)