Sometimes is possible, depending on the type of the coloid; for example aerosols.
The fertilisers can be separated by the process of filteration.
yes most likely because you cant separat a solution
no as it is desovled in solution you would have to boil off the water.
Yes, colloids can be separated using methods like filtration, centrifugation, or dialysis. These techniques can help to separate colloidal particles from the dispersing medium based on factors such as size, density, or charge.
Yes because filteration would seperate the water from the dirt
Hand Pricking, sedimentation, decantation, magnetic sepration, filteration, winnowing, sieving.
Colloids are mixtures where particles are dispersed but not dissolved in a medium, making them not evenly mixed but difficult to separate by filtering due to their small particle size. Alloys, mixtures of metals, can be evenly mixed but still difficult to separate due to their similar properties. Solutions are evenly mixed but can be separated if the components have different boiling points, while suspensions contain larger particles that can be separated by filtering.
Bricks would be considered heterogeneous mixtures. They contain various sediments that can be easily seen and can be separated again.
milk , separating colloids and organic substances
After my opinion they are not colloids.
A colloid is a homogeneous, noncrystalline substance consisting of particles of one substance dispersed through another substance. Some common colloids are gels, sols, and emulsions. Particles cannot be separated out by ordinary filtering or centrifuging and will not settle.
nothing