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You can separate common salt and sand by dissolving the mixture in water and then filtering the solution. The salt will dissolve in water, while the sand will remain as a solid. Next, you can separate the sulfur from the remaining mixture of sulfur and sand by using a magnet since sulfur is weakly magnetic.
you can easily remove iron with magnet. then if you do not care about the sulfur you can set it on fire, and what is left will be pure sand. If you do care about sulfur i don't think i can help you.
By using a magnet to separate the iron filings, you'd be left with the sulfur and sand mix. Selecting a solvent for the sulfur will allow you to dissolve the sulfur, and then all you have to do is put the sand in a filter and wash the sulfur through with the solvent.
Iron fillings has the property of being magnetic, so you could pass it through a magnetic drum to remove it leaving sulfur and sand. Since sulfur is a solute it will dissolve in water leaving sand and forming a solution. You can then pass that through a filter separating the sand and the solution containing water and sulfur. Now you can put the solution in an evaporating basin to evaporate the water leaving the sulfur.
One possible method is to use a magnet to separate the iron fillings from the sulfur sand. The magnet will attract the iron fillings, leaving behind the sulfur sand. Alternatively, the mixture can be treated with a solvent that dissolves the sulfur sand, allowing it to be separated from the iron fillings by filtration.
Sulfur melts at a much lower temperature than sand. That might be useful. Also, there are solvents which will dissolve sulfur but not silicon dioxide. Finally, there's always the magnifying glass and tweezers method.
To separate the components of flour and sulfur, you can use a process called filtration. First, mix the flour and sulfur with water to form a slurry. Then, pass the slurry through a filter paper. The flour will be trapped in the filter paper while the sulfur will pass through as a solution.
Sulfur is soluble in carbon tetrachloride.
You can separate common salt and sand by dissolving the mixture in water and then filtering the solution. The salt will dissolve in water, while the sand will remain as a solid. Next, you can separate the sulfur from the remaining mixture of sulfur and sand by using a magnet since sulfur is weakly magnetic.
you can easily remove iron with magnet. then if you do not care about the sulfur you can set it on fire, and what is left will be pure sand. If you do care about sulfur i don't think i can help you.
Sulfur is extracted with carbon disulfide.Put sand and NaCl in water; sand which is not soluble can be separated from sodium chloride by filtration.
fractional distillation
By using a magnet to separate the iron filings, you'd be left with the sulfur and sand mix. Selecting a solvent for the sulfur will allow you to dissolve the sulfur, and then all you have to do is put the sand in a filter and wash the sulfur through with the solvent.
Sulfur is S , a chemical element . Sodium chloride ( NaCl ) is the table salt , a chemical compound . Sand represents a mineral ; the composition
Iron fillings has the property of being magnetic, so you could pass it through a magnetic drum to remove it leaving sulfur and sand. Since sulfur is a solute it will dissolve in water leaving sand and forming a solution. You can then pass that through a filter separating the sand and the solution containing water and sulfur. Now you can put the solution in an evaporating basin to evaporate the water leaving the sulfur.
Magnets would remove the iron. sugar is water soluble now you have sulfur and sand mixed. Apply heat sulfur will burn before the sand.
Fractional distillation is not the best separation method for a sand and sulfur mix. It's a very poor choice as it won't work. Use a solvent for the sulfur like dimethyl ether of, say, diethylene glycol. It will take the sulfur into solution and you can wash the solution out of the sand.