Sand and water can be separated by Filtration.
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Soluble in water, sand is not.
<p>You can separate the sand by filtration, but still the salt (mainly sodium chloride) is dissolved in the water. Then, you can separate the salt from water by distillation. The liquid you collect after water vapor is chilled is distilled water. You can use other methods to separate sand as sedimentation (usually slower than filtration) and salt as reverse osmosis.<p>
Pour water into the mixture, let the salt dissolve.Then, put the wet-salty water-sand mixture through a sifter/filter.Take out the sand from the filter and dry it. COMPONENT 1 - SANDBoil the salt water solution and evaporate the water. The residue will be salt. COMPONENT 2 SALTDissolve the mixture in water first, before filtering the resultant solution. The residue is the sand, while the filtrate is the salt solution.
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.
Salt is soluble in water where as sand is not. Using a fine paper filter in a funnel the salt can be removed from the sand by rinsing the mixture with water and then the salt can be retreived by evaporating the water. Hope I'm not doing your homework for you