Firstly, water is to be added to make sugar water solution.
The the total mixture of sand and sugar-water solution is passed through filter paper.
The sand separates out and sugar water solution is collected in a vessel.
Then by evaporating sugar is collected.
Soluble in water, sand is not.
without better grammar, I cannot determine exactly what is the question....
I would use the property of solubility in water; sugar is highly soluble in water and sand is highly insoluble.
Sand and water can be separated by Filtration.
Add water, stir til sugar dissolves, fiter repeatedly until the water is clean, slow evap to retrieve the sugar. Add the dust and sand from the filter (most will have separated pretty well, sand on bottom etc) into a cup/beaker/bucket etc and fill with water, put it in a deep tray and add water very slowly to the bucket until the sawdust has all spilt over the edge. Your sand will be in the bucket and sawdust will have overflowed into the tray.
to separate the mixture of sand and sugar:- first: you can mix water in it and after mixing you can separate the water and sand. and after that you boil the water until whole water is evaporated and you get sugar and sand separated. second: if difference b/w size of sugar and sand particle you can use met to separate them.
Put them in water. Sugar dissolves, sand remains Filter the solution to separate sand and salt. Evaporate solution with dissolved salt to get salt back
Dissolve the sugar in water and then evaporate the water
One method to separate iron fillings from sand is by using a magnet. The iron fillings are attracted to the magnet and can be easily separated from the sand.
To separate this mixture, you could first use a magnet to separate the iron filings. Then, you could add water to dissolve the sugar, leaving the sand and sawdust behind. The sawdust can be separated from the sand by filtration.
You can separate a mixture of sand and sugar by using a physical method such as filtration. The process is called sieving. Sand particles are larger and will be retained by the sieve, while the smaller sugar particles will pass through, resulting in their separation.
Yes, water can be used to separate sand and sugar. Sugar will dissolve in water, while sand will not. By adding water to the mixture, the sugar will dissolve and can be separated from the sand by filtration or evaporation.
Soluble in water, sand is not.
You could dissolve the bulk material in water, then pass the solution through a filter paper. This will stop all the sand. The residual solution should be evaporated under a reduced air pressure, so as to avoid overheating the sugar when it crystallizes out.
If you meant, how could you separate a mixture of sugar and sand, then you can disolve sugar in water, filter the sand out of the sugar water solution, then evaporate the water to get the sugar back by boiling it.
No, distillation is not suitable for separating sand from sugar since both substances do not have different boiling points. Distillation relies on differences in boiling points to separate substances, so sand and sugar cannot be separated using this method. Instead, methods such as filtration or dissolution followed by filtration would be more appropriate for separating sand from sugar.
Separate the sugar solution from the sand by passing the solution through a coarse paper filter. Or syphon off the sugar solution, leaving the sand behind.