Due to the chemical composition of Chalk, you can separate it from water either by filtration of evaporation.
I would think you could pour it into a dish and allow the water to evaporate.
As with separating salt from a salty solution of water by evaporation, so, with a chalky solution, you would boil off the water, leaving the chalk behind.
By evaporation.
Filtration is the simplest method.
filtration
A filter.
Filtration
y
Use a magnet to remove the iron filings. Filter the remainder to separate the insoluble chalk powder from the water. Wash and dry the iron filings as they will be contaminated. Dry the chalk powder to remove traces of water.
by the process of SUBLIMATION.....
yes
Use a magnet to remove the iron filings from the mixture, then mix the remaining components with water. The copper sulfate will dissolve but the CaCO3 (chalk powder) will not. Filter the mixture to remove the chalk, then boil the water to recover the copper sulfate.
Stir stones, chalk and water until the chalk is in suspension. Pour off the chalky water (repeat as required), leaving the heavier stones behind. Filter the chalky water to let clear water pass through, so leaving the chalk in the filter paper.
Use a magnet to remove the iron filings. Filter the remainder to separate the insoluble chalk powder from the water. Wash and dry the iron filings as they will be contaminated. Dry the chalk powder to remove traces of water.
first, put the mixture in water . salt will dissolve and then allow chalk powder to settle down. Then try decantation.
by the process of SUBLIMATION.....
yes
Pass the mixture through filter paper. The salt water will pass through leaving the chalk behind in the filter paper.
Sublimation
Use a magnet to remove the iron filings from the mixture, then mix the remaining components with water. The copper sulfate will dissolve but the CaCO3 (chalk powder) will not. Filter the mixture to remove the chalk, then boil the water to recover the copper sulfate.
Due to the chemical composition of Chalk, you can separate it from water either by filtration of evaporation.
Filtration would separate the water, leaving the chalk particles behind.
Filtration would separate the water, leaving the chalk particles behind.
Stir stones, chalk and water until the chalk is in suspension. Pour off the chalky water (repeat as required), leaving the heavier stones behind. Filter the chalky water to let clear water pass through, so leaving the chalk in the filter paper.
No chalk is not solouble. When chalk is put in water the water becomes a suspension ie the particles of chalk keep floating in water.