Separations
\(\require{mhchem}\) Chemists are always being asked how to separate mixtures of things. A mixture is two or more substances put together but not chemically combined. We use different properties of the two substances to achieve separation. Example: you are given a mixture of dry salt and sand. How can we separate them? If you had enough time, a microscope, and a very fine pair of tweezers, you could examined the grains one by one. The cubic grains would be salt, and you could (in theory) sort those out from the others. That would take a dreadfully long time, but this technique of hand picking can occasionally be useful. Louis Pasteur (inventor of Pasteurisation) used it to separate left- and right-handed crystals. In hand picking we are using a physical property of the substances—their appearance—to separate the two substances. An easier way is to use a different property: solubility. If we add water to our mixture, the salt dissolves and the sand doesn't. We can then use...