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By heating the saturated sugar solution, and then adding more sugar.
BothThis is because the salt and sugar would dissolve creating a solution, and the sand would create a suspension!
The sbustance is sugar ;D
The sugar might dissolve in the acid and get added to the solution.
no it did not.
By heating the saturated sugar solution, and then adding more sugar.
Sugar solution
Pure sugar is a compound, which is a pure substance. If you dissolve sugar in water, you will have a homogeneous mixture, which is a solution.
The solvent is the substance which dissolve the solute; for a sugar solution water is the solvent and sugar the solute.
A saturated solution is one in which the no more solute can be dissolved in the solution and then becomes precipitate. Imagine a glass of water and some sugar. You dissolve the sugar in the water and add more sugar until not one grain more will dissolve--the solution is now "saturated" with sugar.
The sugar will dissolve in the water, changing the sugar from solid to liquid.
When enough sugar is dissolved into the solvent (water) , or goes 'in to solution' , that no more will dissolve , the solvent is said to be 'saturated'. The more solvent you have the more sugar you can put into solution. No more sugar will dissolve once the solvent (now your solution) is saturated.
Yes, you can dissolve a solute like sugar in it. The resulting mixture is a solution.
A saturated solution.
Sugar is one.
Saturation
all you have to do is add sugar into boiling water. the sugar will dissolve and make saturated sugar!!