By evaporating the water out, which precipitates the sugar back into its crystalline form.
Pure de-aired water has a bulk modulus equal to approximately 2.2 GPa. There is a common misconception that fluids are totally incompressible, however as can be seen from the above this is not true (if it were, the bulk modulus would be infinitely high). It is reasonable to state that water is highly resistant to compression however. It should also be noted that the presence of dissolved gasses in water can significantly reduce this value so consider carefully the application or system being modelled before choosing an elastic modulus for water or any other fluid.
it is glycerol, a component of fats.IUPAC name would be: propane-1,2,3-triol
no
I would`nt... It serves no purpose. If the water is off there is no pressure when you turn on the tap, hot or cold, so you would be heating water you can`t use.
you can drink pure water and irrigate with it. if the only water available is the sea then you would have to convert it
No it cant because suger dissolves into water
Sugar is soluble in ethanol; sodium chloride is not dissolved.
Sugar is soluble in ethanol; sodium chloride is not dissolved.
because sugar and salt are soluble to water it cannot be seperated by filtration but can by evaporation. in filtration it cannot seperate becasue it has been broken down into tiny particles and it pass through the filter being used.
To separate charcoal and sugar, one method could involve adding water to the mixture and stirring, which would dissolve the sugar but leave the charcoal behind. Next, the mixture could be filtered to separate the dissolved sugar solution from the charcoal residue. Finally, the water could be evaporated to retrieve the sugar.
A mixture of salt and sugar can be separated by using an organic solvent to dissolve the sugar. When the sugar is dissolved, it can be separated by filtering the salt from the liquid sugar,then recrystallise both solutions to from back their original crystals.
You could place the sugar-clay mixture in a wire-mesh sieve, and rinse the mixture with water to dissolve the sugar and remove it from the clay. You would need to do this over a container that would collect the sugar water. Once the sugar is completely dissolved, you could evaporate the water from the sugar water, leaving the sugar behind. The clay would be left behind in the sieve.
No. You should use evaporation of the water to separate the sugar and water.
Place the mixture of sand and sugar in warm water, then stir.Allow the sand to settle to the bottom, then remove using a sieve.Boil off the water and collect the sugar.
Evaporate the water off and recondense it.
That depends on how much sugar is dissolved. It would have to be determined experimentally.
When salt is dissolved in water, the result is a homogeneous mixture called a solution. The salt molecules separate and disperse evenly throughout the water, creating a transparent and salty-tasting liquid.