No, sugar cannot sublime. Sublimation is the process through which a solid turns directly into a gas without passing through the liquid state. Sugar, on the other hand, melts when heated, turning into a liquid (caramel) before eventually decomposing at higher temperatures.
No. Sugar is a solid. When heated, it will burn, but not sublime. (To sublime is to go from the solid state to the gaseous state with no liquid state in between. The most common thing that will sublime is solid carbon dioxide, which we know as "dry ice". It's a solid below about -109F, and sublimes into the gaseous state above that. Carbon dioxide has no liquid state at atmospheric pressure; it is only liquid below 0 degrees F at pressures above 60PSI.)
Camphor will sublime when heated mildly (sugar will not). Heat the mixture mildly, collect the sublimate separately, cool the sublimate to get camphor.
Sublime is actually a French word, so you just say sublime!
Sublime's hit Santaria was released on the album Sublime.
It's the same. Sublime.
The gourmet dinner was sublime.
"Is" is not the best definition of sublime.
Sublime was not a Christian band.
Yes, ammonium chloride can sublime.
the band sublime influenced: bands such as slightly stoopid, tribute bands badfish and the new sublime
Mavis, your raspberry cheesecake is sublime!
Sublime