wouldn't you just use chromotography paper and separate the colours?
Bluebeth x
When you are filtering you have a filterpaper and the ink will bee stuck on it
Through Evaporation. EASY DA!
you use a special sive to do it
..purify the water to separate the mudd salty water..that would be all,,thank you=
Sugar Water , Muddy Water , Sand Water.
Take a black water soluble marker and draw a decent size dot in the middle or a coffee filter. Dip a finger in water and drop a few drops on the dot and watch the colors spread.
No. The solids in muddy water are in suspension rather than true solution; most true solutions in water are transparent, at least in thin layers. Muddy water is not really a solution at all. You can't see through it it's parts can be filtered out. So, your answer is NO muddy water is not a true solution.
To separate pure water from a thicker liquid substance, like ink.
You can either filter the muddy water to separate and remove the solids, or evaporate and then condense the water vapour back into water, which will be clear.
..purify the water to separate the mudd salty water..that would be all,,thank you=
When you are filtering you have a filterpaper and the ink will bee stuck on it
Muddy water is heterogeneous because the mud and water are separate, plus the mud is made up of different things.
Crystalisation
separate water from ink using a process called distillation..
Tattoo ink would separate because it is water based so that it doesn't harm the body.
Yes, it is possible.
It is possible to filter mud out of water.
It is a mixture, since solutions are clear. In solutions, the solute is the substance that is dissolved and mud in water does not dissolve. Muddy water is not a solution, it is a mixture because u can separate mud from water.
Muddy water is a suspension because the particles in a suspension are small, not settled, and separate if left undisturbed like in the most common kind of suspension made of silt and water.
Muddy water is a suspension because the particles in a suspension are small, not settled, and separate if left undisturbed like in the most common kind of suspension made of silt and water.