by the process of sedimentation it can be separated.
A fine sieve.
The gravel and sand filter out smaller particles from the water
Chalk particles can be collected by using a filtration process. A filter paper or a fine sieve can be used to separate the dissolved chalk particles from the water. The water can then be evaporated to obtain the solid chalk residue.
The suspended material is rock-flour - very fine particles arising from the grinding action of rock-on-rock under the moving glacier. Do not drink it!
A suspension is a mixture of water and a non-dissolved material.answerA mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy ora suspension is a heterogeneous fluid containing solid particles that are sufficiently large for sedimentation.
Suspended load
Filtration is a good method; also centrifugation.
A suspension is a mixture of water and a non-dissolved material.answerA mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy ora suspension is a heterogeneous fluid containing solid particles that are sufficiently large for sedimentation.
'Suspension' or as you cited in your question 'suspended load'. Fine materials can be suspended in the water and are carried away in such a method. These particles are too light to sink to the bottom of the fast moving river. Suspension load forms the largest part of the river load. Materials that can be suspended include silt, mud and clay.
A fine sieve.
To allow suspended solids to remain in suspension. Emulsion paint for example contains fine particles of pigment in suspension in water. The emulsifying agent prevents the pigments settling to the bottom.
The gravel and sand filter out smaller particles from the water
Chalk particles can be collected by using a filtration process. A filter paper or a fine sieve can be used to separate the dissolved chalk particles from the water. The water can then be evaporated to obtain the solid chalk residue.
The solute particles in a colloid are so small that they remain suspended. While not combined at the molecular level, they are so fine that they cannot be separated by normal means.
Fine particulates suspended in the air that scatter light, some of these are:Very fine water droplets.Very fine dust particles.Smoke.Smog.Very fine oil droplets.Very fine metal and metal oxide particles (as from Bessemer or Basic Oxygen Process furnace in steel mill).Sulfuric Acid mist (as from Coal power plant or metal Smelter).Nitric Acid mist (as from internal combustion engines lacking nitrogen oxide emission controls).
The suspended material is rock-flour - very fine particles arising from the grinding action of rock-on-rock under the moving glacier. Do not drink it!
Impurities in the water etc fine dirt and sand (small particles in it)