just try to evaporate the water
Allow the water to evaporate.Filter the sulphur out (in paper, say), then allow it to dry.
No, heating would not separate iron and sulfur.
Iron fillings has the property of being magnetic, so you could pass it through a magnetic drum to remove it leaving sulfur and sand. Since sulfur is a solute it will dissolve in water leaving sand and forming a solution. You can then pass that through a filter separating the sand and the solution containing water and sulfur. Now you can put the solution in an evaporating basin to evaporate the water leaving the sulfur.
By the process of diffusion.....
No. sulfur does not react with water.
Allow the water to evaporate.Filter the sulphur out (in paper, say), then allow it to dry.
Sulfur is insoluble in water so it can be removed by filtration.
Yes, it is possible.
by the process of sedimentation it can be separated.
the salt(sodium chloride) wiil dissolve when put in water along with the rest of the mixture, leaving the sulfur all alone.
- Put the mixture in water. - Sodium chloride is soluble, sulfur not. - Filter the liquid. - Sulfur remain on the filter.
the salt(sodium chloride) wiil dissolve when put in water along with the rest of the mixture, leaving the sulfur all alone.
No, heating would not separate iron and sulfur.
Mix it in water,the sugar will dissove leaving the sulphur undissolved
Sulfur is not soluble in water, sodium chloride is very soluble in water. Add water, and then pour through a coffee filter. When fully filtered, leave to dry.
In water quality and hydrology, there are two related terms: Total Suspended Solids (TSS) - the measured solids held in water Sediment Load - the materials carried in moving water (consists of dissolved load and suspended load, separate from bed load)
Sulfur is a chemical element; the smallest unit is the sulfur atom.