1. pour the solution in a bowl and add sum water to it.
2. mix the water and let the salt dissolve.
3.then decant the water using a beaker and filter paper,u get the sulfur as the remainder.
4.evaporate the water.
5. u get both the sulfur and the salt separated.
filteration
No. Sulfur is one of the chemical elements. Its a fairly soft yellow substance. There are many sulfates. Each of them is a combination, or chemical compound, of sulfuric acid with some other substance, often a metal. For instance, epsom salts is magnesium sulfate the sulfuric acid 'salt' of the metal magnesium.
Sulfur blocks help cattle to retain some salt. This is good for their kidneys, other muscles, and heart. Too much sulfur can cause problems with fat loss, though.
neither, a common salt solution is neutral
The most common salt found in the ocean actually came from land. The compound sodium chloride is the most common salt in the sea.
Sulfur is dissolved in carbon disulfide and extracted.Sodium chloride is soluble in water. After filtration sand remain on the filter.
how do you separate aluminum powder and salt
Probably the simplest method is to dissolve the salt in water, filter the sulphur out (then evaporate the salt solution to recover the salt if desired.)
Salt is soluble in water.Sulfur is soluble in carbon disulfide.Sand is insoluble.
Not all powders. Baby powder is talcum powder or corn starch, and baking powder is baking soda,salt,and starch. But, sulfur sand is usually in powder form.
Sulfur is used in black gun powder and Epsom salt. :):):)
filteration
Aluminium (as metal powder, grains, etc.) can be sparated from a sodium chloride solution by filtering.
It is used for black gun powder, vulcanization, Sulfuric acid, Epsom salt, Sulfate, sulfur drugs
Gunpowder typically consists of three main components: 75% nitrate (potassium nitrate or sodium nitrate), 15% charcoal, and 10% sulfur. These ingredients are mixed together in specific ratios to create a combustible mixture that propels a projectile from a firearm.
By evaporation of the water and crystallization of the salt.
In it's true form, salt peter (potassium nitrate) charcoal (carbon) and sulfur.