yes it would. you could also separate it with a magnet then the gravel would stick to the magnet.
+++
Magnetic gravel?
You can separate diatomaceous earth from gravel simply by sieving. Gravel is not magnetic (unless it happens to be a magnetic ore of iron!).
no
sure, why not.
yes it would because you could pour the diatomaceous-earth powder and the gravel into a cup and use a screen to when you pour the gravel cause then the gravel will nit go through and the diatomaceous-earth powder
yes it would. you could also separate it with a magnet then the gravel would stick to the magnet. +++ Magnetic gravel? You can separate diatomaceous earth from gravel simply by sieving. Gravel is not magnetic (unless it happens to be a magnetic ore of iron!).
yes it would because you could pour the diatomaceous-earth powder and the gravel into a cup and use a screen to when you pour the gravel cause then the gravel will nit go through and the diatomaceous-earth powder
no
Yes, it is possible.
The diatomaceous-earth powder pass the screen.
sure, why not.
yes it would because you could pour the diatomaceous-earth powder and the gravel into a cup and use a screen to when you pour the gravel cause then the gravel will nit go through and the diatomaceous-earth powder
yes it would. you could also separate it with a magnet then the gravel would stick to the magnet. +++ Magnetic gravel? You can separate diatomaceous earth from gravel simply by sieving. Gravel is not magnetic (unless it happens to be a magnetic ore of iron!).
yes it would because you could pour the diatomaceous-earth powder and the gravel into a cup and use a screen to when you pour the gravel cause then the gravel will nit go through and the diatomaceous-earth powder
If we need to separate sand and gravel, we simply use the size of the material and a mechanical contraption to do the separating. A screen with mesh of the proper or appropriate dimensions will sieve the particles nicely. The sand will fall through the mesh piling up underneath it, and, if the screen is tilted, the gravel will bounce its way down and off the screen into a separate pile.
An altar screen is a partition separating the nave from the chancel in the church.
You'd strain it with two different sizes of screens. The screen with the widest gap would collect the gravel, but let everything else through. The screen with the smallest gap would collect the salt, but let the powder through.
Yes
it is a measure of success of the screen in closely separating the feed into over size ( which is retained on the screen) and under size (which passes through the screen). The value is always less than 1