1. get your hand.
2. put it down in the sand.
3. grab the charcoal.
4. say woohoo.
get a strainer to get the sand out silly :)
To separate charcoal and sugar, one method could involve adding water to the mixture and stirring, which would dissolve the sugar but leave the charcoal behind. Next, the mixture could be filtered to separate the dissolved sugar solution from the charcoal residue. Finally, the water could be evaporated to retrieve the sugar.
With a sieve.
You should use a magnet to separate iron from sand. Iron is magnetic, so it will be attracted to the magnet and easily separated from the sand. A strainer would not work in this case as it would not be able to separate the two based on their magnetic properties.
You can separate them by filtration and it would help because when you add water the sand would stay because you would have to add cold water so that the sand will stay and the salt will go through.
it would be like thou sand
Iron can be separated from sand using a (electro)magnet.
1. Put the mixture in a bottle containing hot water. 2. Stir vigourously. 3. Filter the mixture on filter paper, medium pores. 4. The charcoal powder remain on the filter, the salt in solution.
Sublimation
put this mixture in water. salt will dissolve in water. now filter this solution with a filter paper. we will get particles of charcoal on the filter paper as residue. now heat the solution of salt and water .the water will evaporate leaving behind salt. thus the mixture of charcoal and salt is separated.
Add water, It separate woodchip(float) and sand(down)
One way to separate sulfur from charcoal is through sublimation. Heat the mixture in a container where sulfur can vaporize and then condense on a cooler surface, separate from the charcoal. This method takes advantage of the difference in sublimation temperatures between sulfur and charcoal.