If you meant, how could you separate a mixture of sugar and sand, then you can disolve sugar in water, filter the sand out of the sugar water solution, then evaporate the water to get the sugar back by boiling it.
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sugar
Add water, and the sugar will dissolve leaving the sand as a solid. Filter that mixture and the sand will stay on the filter paper and the water and sugar will pass through. Evaporate the water, and you'll be left with sugar only.
Put them in water. Sugar dissolves, sand remains Filter the solution to separate sand and salt. Evaporate solution with dissolved salt to get salt back
I have sugar sand what grass will grow?
Pour the mixture into enough water that all the sugar will dissolve. Sand does not dissolve in water, so the sand will settle to the bottom of the solution and then you can sift the sand out of the solution. Then you will just have sand and sugar water, which can evaporate, leaving the sugar behind in the container.
Soluble in water, sand is not.
The sugar dissolves. The sand does not.
No. Sand and sugar make a mixture as they retain their individual properties.
If you meant, how could you separate a mixture of sugar and sand, then you can disolve sugar in water, filter the sand out of the sugar water solution, then evaporate the water to get the sugar back by boiling it.
It depends, the brand of the sugar, the sand is from where, normally sugar is bigger than sand
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The area of Sugar Sand Park is 534,185.0477568 square meters.
I would use the property of solubility in water; sugar is highly soluble in water and sand is highly insoluble.
Separate the sugar solution from the sand by passing the solution through a coarse paper filter. Or syphon off the sugar solution, leaving the sand behind.
sugar