Salt in water because the salt has dissolved
A mixture of water and sand can be separated by stirring the mixture to dissolve the sand in water, followed by filtering the mixture using filter paper. The sand will be left behind as residue on the filter paper, while the water passes through as filtrate.
1. Filteration2. Sedimentation3. Evaporation
No, a mixture of powdered juice and water cannot be separated by filtration because the powdered juice dissolves into the water, creating a solution that passes through the filter paper. Filtration is only effective for separating insoluble solids from liquids.
It must be a combination of two or more substances, only one of which can pass through the filter. An example of this is fruit cocktail in syrup. The syrup can pass thru a porous paper filter, but not the fruit.
1. Run a magnet over the mixture. Iron will be attracted to the magnet, hence allowing it to be separated.2. Sublime/crystallise the ammonium chloride through heating. 3. Dissolve what you have left in water. Now filter the mixture through a filter funnel with filter paper. The residue on the filter paper would be sand.
A mixture of water and sand can be separated by stirring the mixture to dissolve the sand in water, followed by filtering the mixture using filter paper. The sand will be left behind as residue on the filter paper, while the water passes through as filtrate.
water and sand there is dissolved sugar or salt with sand
Salt is soluble in water, unlike pepper, so you can put the mixture in water and filter it using a coffee filter. The pepper will stay in the coffee filter and the salt can be separated from the water by leaving the solution in the sun.
A filter or filtration. This is the process of separating solids from liquids by providing a medium (filter) through which only the fluids can pass. The water in this case would be the filtrate.
1. Filteration2. Sedimentation3. Evaporation
1. Put this mixture in water and stir. 2. Filter the suspension on paper filter or other type of filter. 3. The sand remain on the filter and the salt in the filtrate.
In this type of mixture, the sand would be separated out, because it is not soluble in water
No, a mixture of powdered juice and water cannot be separated by filtration because the powdered juice dissolves into the water, creating a solution that passes through the filter paper. Filtration is only effective for separating insoluble solids from liquids.
A mixture of saltwater can be separated by evaporation. When the water is heated, it evaporates, leaving the salt behind. The water vapor can be collected and condensed back into liquid form, resulting in the separation of the salt and water.
It must be a combination of two or more substances, only one of which can pass through the filter. An example of this is fruit cocktail in syrup. The syrup can pass thru a porous paper filter, but not the fruit.
A homogeneous mixture, such as a solution, cannot be separated with a screen or paper filter because its components are evenly distributed at a molecular level and cannot be physically separated by size.
1. Run a magnet over the mixture. Iron will be attracted to the magnet, hence allowing it to be separated.2. Sublime/crystallise the ammonium chloride through heating. 3. Dissolve what you have left in water. Now filter the mixture through a filter funnel with filter paper. The residue on the filter paper would be sand.