Evaporating the liquid the pure solid remain as residue.
evaporation and filtering
Filtering Distillation Evaporation
Two mixtures can be seperated using evaporation cause they have diffrent boiling points.The process is call distillation,one mixture will boil and evaporate leaving the other in the flask.Therefore separating the two mixtures.
winnowing,sieving,sedimentation ,centrifugation ,decantation, evaporation
Examples are: evaporation, extraction electrophoresis, elutriation.
There are several different ways and procedures of separating mixtures, though, some mixtures areirreversible, and can permanently be combined. A few ways of separating mixtures is through evaporation, filtration, sieving, gravity separation, distillation, condensation, froth flotation, magnetic separation, chromatography, and centrifuging (http://www.slideshare.net/brittgow/separating-mixtures-1247457). Also certain chemical reactions can separate mixtures, or create substances, i.e. acid+base=salt+water etc. (If this is no help I'm sorry just look up separating mixtures on Google).
Some common ways of separating mixtures include filtration (based on particle size), distillation (based on differences in boiling points), chromatography (based on differences in solubility), and evaporation (based on differences in volatility).
the main way of separating a solution is evaporation or distillation, to separate two liquids this doesn't work. someone improve my answer.
separating an insoluble solid from a liquid: decantation, filtration separating a dissolved solid (solute) from a solution: evaporation, crystallization separating the solute and solvent from a solution: simple distillation separating a mixture of two miscible liquids: fractional distillation
Examples of methods for separating mixtures include filtration (separating solids from liquids), distillation (separating liquids based on boiling points), chromatography (separating components based on their affinity for a mobile and stationary phase), and magnetism (separating magnetic materials from non-magnetic materials).
by separating it
No, not all mixtures can be separated through straining. Straining is effective for heterogeneous mixtures, such as separating solid particles from liquids, but it cannot separate homogeneous mixtures where the components are uniformly distributed, like salt dissolved in water. Other methods, such as filtration, evaporation, or distillation, may be required to separate different types of mixtures effectively.