Pour the mixture in alcohol. The sugar will dissolve and the salt can be separated, and then, pour water on the alcohol/sugar solution. Wait for the water/alcohol to evaporate, then the sugar will be left.
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
1. Salt will dissolve in carbon disulphide 2. Now we have a mixture of iron filings sugar and carbon disulphide(salt dissolved in it) 3. Separate iron filings by magnet. 4. Remove the sugar by Decantation process. 5. Separate carbon disulphide and salt by distilation.
add water and then boil it.
It will be difficult to separate them in something that they both dissolve into (like water or ethanol). You can try changing the temperature and the sugar may precipitate out, depending on the sugar. To get a complete separation I would evaporated the water first and just separate the salt and sugar. Then you can separate the solids by dissolving the sugar into a polar solvent like toluene. NaCl will not dissolve in toluene but all of the sugar should.
Yes, you can separate iodized salt from white sugar using a physical method, such as dissolution and filtration. When mixed with water, the salt will dissolve while sugar remains undissolved. By filtering the mixture, you can collect the undissolved sugar and then evaporate the water to retrieve the salt. However, this process may not be practical for small quantities and may result in some loss of either substance.
Sugar burns when it is heated to a very high temperature. Salt does not burn.
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
1. Salt will dissolve in carbon disulphide 2. Now we have a mixture of iron filings sugar and carbon disulphide(salt dissolved in it) 3. Separate iron filings by magnet. 4. Remove the sugar by Decantation process. 5. Separate carbon disulphide and salt by distilation.
yep
Any of the three types of chromatography (column , thin - layer or paper) can be used to separate the salt from sugar and vice-verse !
Evaporate the water, suger and salt will be left behind.
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.
Sugar is soluble in ethanol; sodium chloride is not dissolved.
Sugar is soluble in ethanol; sodium chloride is not dissolved.
Evaporate the water, suger and salt will be left behind.
well, i think you lick it. The salt tastes salty, and the sugar tastes sweet. Isn't that simple?
Salt and sugar have different chemical appearences and shapes. Their taste is also different!