Yes. Sugar dissolves in water.
boil the water, what is left in the cup is sugar
When a solid such as a sugar cube dissolves in water, the molecules of the sugar cube spread out and become surrounded by water molecules. The water molecules interact with the sugar molecules and weaken their bonds, causing the sugar molecules to separate and disperse throughout the water, resulting in a homogeneous mixture.
When coffee and sugar are mixed, the sugar dissolves in the coffee due to its solubility in water. This sweetens the coffee and enhances its flavor. Mixing coffee with sugar is a common way to sweeten the beverage to personal preference.
Mixing mud, sugar, and water is a physical change because there is no new substance formed. The individual components retain their chemical properties even after mixing.
The ability to separate the sugar and water through physical means (such as evaporation) would be conclusive evidence that mixing sugar in water is a physical change. This shows that the properties of both the sugar and water have not changed chemically, indicating a physical rather than a chemical change.
Before mixing you have, of course, separately sugar, water and drink mix.
sugar solution in water
boil the water, what is left in the cup is sugar
Sugar and Salt
When a solid such as a sugar cube dissolves in water, the molecules of the sugar cube spread out and become surrounded by water molecules. The water molecules interact with the sugar molecules and weaken their bonds, causing the sugar molecules to separate and disperse throughout the water, resulting in a homogeneous mixture.
You get salt water.
They both create mixtures called solutions.
Physical. The water breaks up the crystals of sugar into individual molecules, but you still have sugar and water. The sugar is just in smaller clumps.
When coffee and sugar are mixed, the sugar dissolves in the coffee due to its solubility in water. This sweetens the coffee and enhances its flavor. Mixing coffee with sugar is a common way to sweeten the beverage to personal preference.
The sugar will dissolve in water because sugar is polar and so is water with hydrogen bonds. When attraction happens, the water molecules will separate the sugar molecules and the sugar will be dissolved.
First and for most, sugar mixing in water is not a chemical change. It is a physical change (Something which can be gotten back) Water and sugar, once mixed, can both be seperated by heated the liquid. The water evaporates, thus the sugar is left behind. Hope i helped. Chao!
Physical. The water breaks up the crystals of sugar into individual molecules, but you still have sugar and water. The sugar is just in smaller clumps.