No, sugar is not an iron.
A magnet will cause the iron to adhere and separate. Or adding water will dissolve the sugar and the iron can be filtered out and then the water evaporated from the sugar.
No, the chemical compound 'sugar' eg. glucose (C6H12O6) does not contain iron (Fe), but in commercial sugar there might be traces of iron salts, mainly sulfates (
Either use a strong magnet to attract iron files away from the sugar. Or, dissolve the sugar in water and pour off the sugary liquid, leaving the iron filings behind.
nothing
No. Table sugar (sucrose) is C12H22O11. No iron in there.
A magnet
Use a magnet to pick up the iron. Then add water. The sugar will dissolve and run out as syrup, and the sand will remain. ----
No. Fructose is a simple sugar or monosacharide, and has no iron in it whatsoever.
Use a magnet to separate the iron filings, filter the remaining sawdust and sugar water solution, evaporate the water from the sugar water solution.
You can separate the components of the mixture by using a magnet to separate the iron filings from the sawdust and sugar. You can then use a sieve to separate the sawdust from the sugar based on particle size differences.
Use a magnet
use a magnet