true
Table sugar is the sugar you use for cooking
No. Table sugar (sucrose) is covalent.
ok so some examples of pure substances are gold sugar table salt distilled water(pure) iron filings
ones sweet ones notNO...i think he needs to know the structural difference.Nope, the people that answered above don't take these questions seriously. what they mean is, what would salt and sugar fall under, atoms, elements, mixtures, or pure substances..Which of the answers listed?so which one is it?raw sugar issweeti think it is a mixture because substance is in liquid formwell one is sugar and one is salt...
Soluble substances are substances that can be dissolved,(example, in a liquid) :CoffeeSaltSugarRaro/ powdered juicebaking sodagelatineand detergent
true
it is not true it is a chemical reaction
Sugar and [table] salt.
No, they are not.For example: table salt and table sugar.(household sugar and salt); salt is sodium chloride(NaCl), and sugar is sucrose(C12H22O2). Therefore no not all substances that look the same are the same.
they are made up of different substances and are broken down different
It is a chemical change because table sugar is a pure substance that changed into completely different substances (caramel).
Table sugar and table salt are a pure substances unless the salt is labeled iodized salt. Iodized salt is regular table salt with tiny amounts of an iodine compound added such as potassium iodide or sodium iodide. The iodine is added because many people have an iodine deficit which can lead to thyroid problems.
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.
C- candy, table sugar, sugarless gum
table sugar means which are kept on table .in small beautiful bottle is called table sugar.
Sodium Cloride
C6H12O6 (six atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen, and 6 atoms of oxygen making it a carbohydrate, because of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen