The short answer is yes, sugar does help plants grow.
However, excessive amounts of sucrose can be harmful to a plant.
For plants growing hydroponically or in a selective medium such as in a petri dish, sucrose is often used as a carbon source for sprouting plants.
Plants make sugars through photosynthesis by combining water and carbon dioxide. Plants use carbon dioxide as their main carbon source so they do not need sugar in their substrate to grow. But young plants and tissue plant clones that aren't yet efficiently producing sugars through photosynthesis can benefit from the extra carbon stored in sucrose.
Sugar water used in a plant's natural environment can also attract other organisms and bacteria. Although some may be symbiotic (help the plant), many can interfere with the plant's growth or even cause it to die.
Note this question is similar to one frequently asked about growing plants using carbonated soda drinks.
No, sugar forms a solution when mixed with water.
Solute
When sugar and water are mixed, the sugar dissolves in the water, therefore water is the solvent and sugar is the solute.
No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.
The sugar dissolves, but not as fast as if the water were warm. If there's more sugar than that amount of water can hold at that temperature, then the sugar stops dissolving at some point, even if you keep stirring.
i think it does not help plants grow because i really don't know
No, sugar forms a solution when mixed with water.
Sugar water
Water with sugar mixed in.
The sugar disinigrates and is part of the water
A mixture because the sugar is mixed in the water
solvent
Sugar dissolves in water to form a homogeneous solution.
its like a sugar cube. you have sugar and water then it freezes. then the water is sweet. so therefore its a sugar cube
Solute
Solute
The sugar is a solute and the water is the solvent. Together they make a sugar solution.