Suspension
A liquid mixture in which particles can be seen and easily separated by settling or filtration is a suspension.
It is a suspension.
It is a suspension.
A colloidal suspension is a type of heterogeneous mixture where particles are evenly dispersed throughout a medium like a liquid or gas, preventing settling. This is due to the small size of the particles, which remain suspended through constant movement and collisions with the particles of the medium.
A mixture characterized by the settling of particles is known as a suspension. In a suspension, larger particles are dispersed in a liquid or gas but are not dissolved, leading them to eventually settle at the bottom when left undisturbed. This contrasts with solutions, where the solute is fully dissolved, and colloids, where particles remain evenly distributed without settling. Common examples of suspensions include muddy water and orange juice with pulp.
A mixture in which the layers are too small to be seen, such as whipped cream, is called a colloid. In a colloid, tiny particles are dispersed throughout a continuous medium, resulting in a uniform appearance without settling. This type of mixture exhibits properties of both solutions and suspensions, but the particles remain suspended rather than settling out.
A solution in which particles can be separated by settling is a heterogeneous mixture. The heavier particles settle at the bottom due to gravity, allowing for their separation from the lighter particles. This process is known as sedimentation.
A heterogeneous mixture is one where the components are visibly different and can be easily separated using physical methods like filtration or sorting. Examples include a mixture of sand and salt, where the sand particles can be seen and separated from the smaller salt particles.
A Suspension Here the particle size can be viewed by the naked eye. The particles display the tyndal effect where the particles are used as the medium for light rays. The particles also settle down after a short period of time and this mixture can be seperated using a funnel or evaporation(if it is an aqueous solution).
colloid
Sandy water is a mixture, not a compound. It consists of water (H2O) as the solvent and sand particles as the solute, which are mixed together physically and can be separated through filtration or settling.
when the particle do not collide with the wall of the container or with the other particles is called free settling the suspended particles in the medium do nor effect it and when the particle collide with the other particles and with the wall of the container an d collides with the suspended particles is called hindered settling