What happens when materials dissolve and mix?

Sometimes, when you add a solid to a liquid, it looks like it has vanished, as you can no longer see it in the liquid. However, it hasn’t vanished at all.
When a solid like salt is added to water, it can dissolve into it. This means the tiny pieces of the solid spread out evenly through the liquid to form a solution. The salt is still there; it’s just mixed so well that you can’t see it anymore.
This is a reversible change. The salt can be separated from the water again by letting or making the water evaporate.

Watch: Luna the Magician - Mixes
The magic of mixing! It’s not magic, it’s definitely science, but try telling Luna that!
LUNA PHASE: Yo yo yo.
LUNA PHASE: I'm Luna Phase, Tamworth's number one street magician. When I turn the cup upside down, the water is gone.
LUNA PHASE: Oh, look, the water is gone.
LUNA PHASE: How does she do it? Magic.
VOICEOVER: Mind blowing. Magic.
LUNA PHASE: It's gonna be great. Come on, follow me.
WAITER: Gary! She's back.
LUNA PHASE: Attention, diners. Can you just confirm what's inside this for me, please?
DINER: What, inside the salt shaker?
LUNA PHASE: Yeah, exactly.
DINER: Pretty sure it's just salt. Excuse me, who are you?
LUNA PHASE: Watch closely. Something amazing is about to happen.
LUNA PHASE: How does she do it?
LUNA PHASE: Magic.
LUNA PHASE: Yeah. Sorry. That was meant to go off later. Yeah.
LUNA PHASE: Can we cut-
DINER: Oh it's all in my salad man!
LUNA PHASE: Okay. Watch the salt shaker.
LUNA PHASE: And how does she do it? Magic.
DINER 2: What did you do that for?
LUNA PHASE: The salt has completely disappeared.
DINER 2: No it hasn't. It's just soaked at the bottom of the glass.
LUNA PHASE: Hang on then. Just wait a second.
DINER 2: That's my fork.
LUNA PHASE: Just wait.
LUNA PHASE: Totally disappeared.
DINER 2: It hasn't disappeared. It's just dissolved in the water.
LUNA PHASE: Totally disappeared.
LUNA PHASE: How does she do it?
LUNA PHASE: Magic.
DINER 2: It's not magic. It's science. You've made a solution where the salt is evenly mixed into the water.
LUNA PHASE: She's literally ruining the magic.
DINER 2: Well, if it's really magic, you'll be able to get my salt back. Please.
LUNA PHASE: Easy. Look closely and I will make the water disappear.
LUNA PHASE: I'd take a few days. Probably need to take it out in the Sun, actually. And it could take longer if it rains.
DINER 2: So you're waiting for the heat of the Sun to evaporate the water and leave the salt behind? That's how you separate solids that have dissolved in liquids.
LUNA PHASE: What are you, some kind of science teacher?
DINER 2: Yes.
DINER 2: It's called evaporation.
LUNA PHASE: I think you mean evapor magic!
DINER 2: It's not magic.
DINER 2: Excuse me. Could I have some more salt, please?
WAITER: No. We've run out. Someone keeps dumping it into water.
LUNA PHASE: Okay. Yeah, that was me, I confess.
WAITER: Yeah, I know.
LUNA PHASE: But if it's more salt you want, I think you'll be pleasantly surprised by what's behind that menu!
WAITER: Yeah. There's nothing.
LUNA PHASE: Leg it.
LUNA PHASE: How does she do it? Magic!
LUNA PHASE: Get out of here! Go, go go! Get out!
What is dissolving and mixing?

Dissolving happens when a solid mixes evenly into a liquid to make a solution. For example:
- salt dissolves in water
- sugar dissolves in tea
Not all solids dissolve. For example:
- sand will sink to the bottom when placed in water
- flour does not dissolve either - it forms a suspension
A suspension is a cloudy mixture where the fine particles of the original material (such as bits of flour) stay spread throughout the water.


How can you get a solid back from a solution?
Dissolving is a reversible change, which means the original material can be recovered from the liquid.
If you leave a salt solution somewhere warm, the water will evaporate into the air, as water vapour. Evaporation happens when a liquid changes into a gas.
When the water evaporates, the solid salt is left behind.
This shows that dissolving does not make a new material, it just mixes things in a way that can be undone. It is a reversible change.


Horrible Science
Every time you swim in the sea, you’re swimming in a giant salt solution. The Dead Sea in Asia is so salty that people can float easily in it without even trying.
That’s because dissolved salt makes the water denser (more tightly packed) helping objects stay on the surface.
Find out more about reversible and irreversible changes.

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