Both (table) salt and sugar are soluble in water.
Sugar is soluble in water
Yes
Some solubles are; Sherbet, Sugar, Salt, Some insolubles are; chalk, sand
Substances which can be dissolved in a solvent are said to be soluble in that solvent.For ExampleSugarSaltbaking powderwashing sodathese are in soluble in water.
If the salt is insoluble, any ions in water and the measured pH is the pH of water.
oil and water
that is hydroxide
No, they are both soluable in water
No because sugar is insoluble solid.
Some solubles are; Sherbet, Sugar, Salt, Some insolubles are; chalk, sand
An example of an item that is soluble in water is salt. If you put salt in water, the salt disappears. An insoluble item in water is oil or sand, because no matter how many times you stir it, the sand or oil is always there.
Soluble substances: table salt in water, sugar in water, potassium carbonate in water, etc.Insoluble substances: table salt in acetone, silver in ethanol, barium sulfate in water.
I would use the property of solubility in water; sugar is highly soluble in water and sand is highly insoluble.
An insoluble salt added to water remain as a residue at the bottom of the beaker.
Substances which can be dissolved in a solvent are said to be soluble in that solvent.For ExampleSugarSaltbaking powderwashing sodathese are in soluble in water.
If the salt is insoluble, any ions in water and the measured pH is the pH of water.
oil and water
that is hydroxide
Sugar is soluble in water forming a sugar solution. The sugar would be the solute. The water would be the solvent.