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Separating Mixtures

Mixing and Dissolving: Separating Mixtures

Separating Mixtures

Separating Mixtures

What you'll learn

  • Identify simple methods to separate mixtures: picking, sieving, filtering, and evaporation.
  • Match each separation method to the type of mixture it suits best.
  • Explain why separation is useful in daily life.
  • Connect separation methods to Indian kitchen and farming practices.

Key concepts

Level 1 - Why we separate mixtures

Mixtures are separated to get back a pure material, remove unwanted parts, or clean something. The method used depends on how the materials in the mixture differ from each other.

Level 2 - Common separation methods

Hand-picking is used for large, different-looking solids like stones from rice. Sieving separates solids of different sizes, like flour from bran. Filtration separates an insoluble solid from a liquid, like muddy water passed through cloth. Evaporation gets back a dissolved solid from a solution, like salt from salt water.

Level 3 - Choosing the right method

If the solid does not dissolve, filtration or sieving works. If the solid has dissolved, evaporation is needed to bring it back. If pieces are large enough to see and differ clearly, hand-picking is simplest.

Level 4 - Indian context

Before cooking, rice and pulses are hand-picked to remove small stones. Wheat flour is sieved through a chalni to remove husk and bran. Villagers filter river water through cloth before boiling it for drinking. Salt makers in coastal areas evaporate seawater in shallow pans to collect solid salt crystals.

NCERT anchor: Looking Around 4, Ch 18 — Too Much Water, Too Little Water (clean water), Ch 6 — Making a Difference (everyday materials)

Worked example

Separating stones from rice

Step 1 - Spread rice with small stones on a plate.
Step 2 - Look closely and pick out each stone by hand.
Step 3 - Collect stones separately from clean rice.
Step 4 - Rice is now free of stones and ready to cook.
Answer: Hand-picking separates large solid pieces of different appearance.

Getting salt back from salt water

Step 1 - Pour salt water into a shallow dish.
Step 2 - Place the dish in strong sunlight.
Step 3 - Wait for the water to evaporate over some days.
Step 4 - White salt crystals remain in the dish.
Answer: Evaporation separates a dissolved solid from its solution.

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Filtration can separate dissolved salt from waterFiltration confused with evaporationFiltration only removes undissolved solids; evaporation recovers dissolved solids
Sieving works for any mixtureMethod generalised too farSieving only works well when particle sizes are clearly different
Hand-picking is enough for all mixturesSimplicity assumed for all casesHand-picking only suits large, easily visible, different-looking pieces
Separated materials change into something newConfusing separation with a chemical changeSeparation only sorts materials; it does not change what they are

Quick check

  • Name one method to separate stones from rice.
  • Which method separates a dissolved solid from a liquid?
  • Why can filtration not remove dissolved salt from water?
  • Name one Indian daily-life use of sieving.
  • Stretch: Plan the correct order of steps to fully separate a mixture of sand, salt, and water into three separate parts.

Revision tip: Pick the separation method that matches how the materials differ — size, solubility, or visible appearance.

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Separating Mixtures.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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