Question
How will you separate common salt, sand and iron filings from their mixture?

Answer

Mixture of common salt, sand and iron filings can be separated by using magnet first. A horse-shoe magnet is moved on the surface of the mixture. The iron filings are attracted by the magnet, they cling to the poles of the magnet and get separated. This process is repeated a number of times till complete separation of iron filings occur leaving behind mixture of common salt and sand. The mixture of common salt and sand is then dissolved in water and then filtered with the help of filter paper. Sand remains as residue on the filter paper while common salt solution is obtained as filtrate .The filtrate is then evaporated to get crystals of common salt.

Need a full question paper?

Generate a complete, print-ready paper with questions like this in minutes — across 16+ boards, with answer keys.

Start Generating Free

Similar questions

Describe the composition of human blood.
Enlist various types of species diversity.
From a cliff of $49 m$ high, a man drops a stone. One second later, he throws another stone. They both hit the ground at the same time. Find out the speed with which he threw the second stone.
Name the following:
  1. Smallest cell organelle.
  2. Largest cell organelle.
  3. ER studded with ribosomes.
  4. Functional segments of the DNA molecule.
Fractional distillation is suitable for separation of miscible liquids with a boiling point difference of about $25\ K$ or less. What part of fractional distillation apparatus makes it efficient and possess an advantage over a simple distillation process. Explain using a diagram.
Differentiate between sclerenchyma and parenchyma tissue. Draw well labelled diagram.
$A, B$ and $C$ are all liquids. Liquid $A$ has a comparatively low boiling point. On heating, liquid a vaporizes completely without leaving behind any residue. Liquid $A$ is being used increasingly as a fuel in motor vehicles either alone or by mixing with petrol. Liquid $B$ has a very high boiling point. It also vaporizes completely on heating, without leaving any residue. Liquid $B$ is a conductor of electricity and used in making thermometers. Liquid $c$ has a moderate boiling point. On heating, liquid $C$ vaporises leaving behind a white solid $D$ which is used in cooking vegetables. The condensation of vapours from $C$ give a liquid $E$ which turns anhydrous $\mathrm{CuSO}_4$ to blue.
  1. Which liquid could be an element? Name this element.
  2. Which liquid could be a mixture? Name this mixture.
  3. Which liquid could be a compound? Name this compound.
  4. What could the solid $D$ be?
  5. What do you think is liquid $E$?
We know that many human activities lead to increasing levels of pollution of the air, water-bodies and soil. Do you think that isolating these activities to specific and limited areas would help in reducing pollution?
Show by means of graphical method that:
v = u + at
where the symbols have their usual meanings.
How are the criteria for deciding divisions in plants different from the criteria for deciding the subgroups among animals?