oil with heat from a stove works or without heat you can u an acid like bleach
No. Chalk is insoluble in water. Adding sugar will not change that.
No, a mixture of sugar and chalk is considered heterogeneous. This is because sugar and chalk do not dissolve in each other, so they would have visible differences and not form a uniform composition throughout the mixture.
A foil does not separate chalk, sugar, and water because these substances are all able to mix and dissolve in water. Chalk is insoluble in water but sugar is soluble, so both can dissolve into the water without being separated by the foil barrier.
Salt melts ice better than chalk or sugar. Salt lowers the freezing point of water, causing ice to melt. Chalk does not have any properties that make it effective in melting ice, while sugar does not lower the freezing point as effectively as salt.
Physical. It is still butter. It is still just a piece of bread. But now it is butter on a piece of bread with a bite out of it. The bread/butter is not chemically changing to form a TOTALLY new substance. For instance, when you melt butter its no longer a solid its now a liquid. Looks different, the temperature is different, and it may even taste diifferent but its still butter. But if you were to take sugar and dissolve it in water it becomes a totally different substance.
i tried it and salt melts ice better than the other does anyone gonna answer me
because ice is a liquid and chalk is colorful and ice is not colorful it is clear that's why!
The most importance cookies substances are sugar and butter
toffee Paul Fernandes
No. Chalk is insoluble in water. Adding sugar will not change that.
To separate sugar and chalk powder, you can use water to dissolve the sugar while the chalk remains insoluble. First, mix the sugar and chalk with water to create a suspension. Next, filter the mixture; the chalk will be left on the filter paper, while the sugar solution passes through. Finally, evaporate the water from the sugar solution to obtain the sugar crystals.
No, a mixture of sugar and chalk is considered heterogeneous. This is because sugar and chalk do not dissolve in each other, so they would have visible differences and not form a uniform composition throughout the mixture.
These substances are chlorides of calcium, sodium and magnesium.
Chalk
It is better to just toast you bread with no cinnamon-sugar on it then butter if wanted. After that. cinnamon! sugar! Yum!
One way to separate chalk and sugar is by dissolving the mixture in water - the sugar will dissolve while the chalk will not. The two can then be separated by filtering the mixture to collect the chalk residue from the filter paper and allowing the water to evaporate to collect the sugar.
One way to separate powder chalk and sugar is by using a process called filtration. Mix the chalk and sugar with water to make a solution, then use a filter paper to separate the chalk particles from the sugar solution. The chalk particles will be left on the filter paper while the sugar solution passes through.