ethanol
different dyes travel with different speed/rates on filter paper in paper chromatography as they have nothing to do with the filter paper as it is the stationary medium while the rates depends upon the interaction between the solute i.e., dyes and the mobile phase i.e., the solvent.
Chromatography is the method used to separate a mixture of dyes or inks.
chromatography
You will get a chromatograph of the dyes in the pen's ink, instead of a reference mark.
i think its chromatography :)
different dyes travel with different speed/rates on filter paper in paper chromatography as they have nothing to do with the filter paper as it is the stationary medium while the rates depends upon the interaction between the solute i.e., dyes and the mobile phase i.e., the solvent.
Dyes and inks are used to color things we use (eg. colors for food, clothes and pens) The point of chromatography is to find out if the color in a felt pen is pure or a mixture of dyes.
Chromatography is the method used to separate a mixture of dyes or inks.
chromatography
Paper chromatography is a method used for separating out different components of solution. The most common classroom use for it is to visually see the different colored dyes in ink because the different colors will travel different lengths across the paper.
The colors will bleed out onto the paper and you would be able to identify what and how many color dyes are in that candy piece.
You will get a chromatograph of the dyes in the pen's ink, instead of a reference mark.
Dyes and inks are separated using a method called chromatography. Basically you put a dot of ink or the dye you to separate on a piece of chromatography paper and stand it up-right. The ink spot or dye will spread across the paper and separate into different colours.
Chromatography
Using chromatography.
What is charmatograhy paper? Just kidding! I assume you mean chromatography paper. Well, the answer to your question lies in the solubility of the different colour dyes. The more soluble the dye the faster it will travel across the paper. Also, some substances react better with the paper but I'm not sure that is the right answer.
It has to do with the difference in affinity between the dyes that make up the ink or food coloring and the blotting paper compared to the solvent. This is paper chromatography. The dyes are carried along by the solvent (water) but is attracted to the substrate (the blotting paper). Some inks travel faster than others.