a salt separator a salt separator
Evaporate the water.
You can filter it or evaporate and condense the water
If you let the water evaporate, the sugar will be left behind.
Evaporate off the water which will leave sugar crystals
Use filtration to separate the sand from the water and salt. Then use evaporation to separate the salt from the water. Use distillation to evaporate the water, leaving the salt behind. Then use filtration to separate the remaining sand from the salt.
Dont get me wrong, but you seem to be asking how to separate salt from water. I think if you evaporate water, the salt cannot evaporate, and it stays behind. However, if the light is really hot, it will evaporate the salt along with the water. (Example: If you put salt and water in a dish and hold it on top of a lit candle, the light is hot enough to evaporate water, but not hot enough to evaporate salt.
Evaporate the water off and recondense it.
Evaporate the water. Salt is left behind when the water dries up.
Evaporate the water, suger and salt will be left behind.
You can use the property of solubility in water to separate sugar from a mixture. Since sugar is soluble in water, you can dissolve the mixture in water and then use filtration or evaporation to separate the sugar from the other components.
Evaporate water, then the salt would be separated.
Evaporate the water, suger and salt will be left behind.