Well it has millions of different grains of sugar in it in which this is why it can be poured.
Sugar is a molecular solid
When sugar particles melt, they break apart from their solid crystal lattice and become a liquid. When they dissolve in water, the individual sugar molecules become surrounded by water molecules, forming a sugar-water solution.
A change in physical state occurs when sugar is heated and transforms into a thick, colorless liquid substance. This transformation from solid sugar to liquid form is a physical change, not a chemical change, as the chemical composition of the sugar remains the same.
Solid, Because its particles are joint together thats why its sweet solid
We use the word "dissolved" when referring to a solid substance mixing completely with a liquid to form a homogeneous solution. For example, sugar dissolves in water to form a sugar solution.
Solute is any substance that is dissolved in a substance and is present in less quantity than the other substance. If the solute is a solid substance then it is called a solid solute. For example :- sugar dissolve in water, sugar is solid solute.
No, sugar crystals are not considered rocks. Rocks are naturally occurring solid objects made up of minerals, while sugar crystals are formed from a dissolved substance (sugar) that solidifies as it crystallizes.
Dissolved sugar is a homogeneous mixture. While sugar is a pure substance in its solid form, when dissolved in water it forms a mixture where the sugar molecules are evenly distributed throughout the solvent.
yes,sugar is solid
Sugar is a molecular solid
Sugar is not an alkaline substance.
Nope. That is a physical change. a sugar cube that is crushed into powdered sugar is still sugar.
sugar is a solid.
By definition, a mineral is a solid inorganic substance of natural occurrence. Cane sugar is an organic substance, derived from sugarcane (a plant). It is sucrose: a disaccharide, formed organically from two monosaccharides - glucose and fructose. Therefore, cane sugar, as well as any other type of sugar, does not meet the definition of a mineral.
Sugar is a pure substance because everything in a sample is alike: a molecule of sugar.
When sugar particles melt, they break apart from their solid crystal lattice and become a liquid. When they dissolve in water, the individual sugar molecules become surrounded by water molecules, forming a sugar-water solution.
A change in physical state occurs when sugar is heated and transforms into a thick, colorless liquid substance. This transformation from solid sugar to liquid form is a physical change, not a chemical change, as the chemical composition of the sugar remains the same.