Sugar solution
The mixture when elements that form a mineral dissolve in hot water is called a solution.
Yes, Heterogeneous Additional information: The sugar is dissolved in the water. This "mixture" consists of two different types of molecules (thus we call it a mixture): water molecules (H2O) and sugar molecules (one type of sugar is table sugar, C12H22O11)
Yes, Heterogeneous Additional information: The sugar is dissolved in the water. This "mixture" consists of two different types of molecules (thus we call it a mixture): water molecules (H2O) and sugar molecules (one type of sugar is table sugar, C12H22O11)
Since sugar is soluble in water and sand is not, it would be quite easy to separate them. You could place the mixture into a container with water, let the sugar dissolve (it will dissolve faster if the water is hot) and then pour the water through a filter, to filter out the sand. If you wanted to, you could let the water evaporate (or boil it away) leaving behind the sugar. This situation does not actually come up very often, but I would call the process selective dissolving.
If you did this the salt would probably dissolve. The mixture is a solution.
I think you mean a homogeneous mixture. Its because sugar is completely dissolved in water, so it will not be visible anymore, therefore, they become with only one phase or as you call it... a 'clear solution'
Sugar water
It is not a mixture but a compound of hydrogen and oxygen. We call this compound water.
solutions; water
Simple: an insoluble material (in a given solvent, at a given temperature and pressure).
Substances that cannot dissolve in water are called insoluble substances. These substances do not mix with water and remain as separate phases when added to water.
Soil is not dissolved in water.