This filter is designed to capture the smallest of particles and chemicals.
Yes.
Nose?
contaminate
Filtering can trap undissolved particles because the filter has tiny pores that are smaller than the particles being filtered. As the liquid passes through the filter, the particles get stuck in these pores, preventing them from passing through with the liquid. This allows the filtered liquid to flow through while trapping the particles.
big particles=low porosity small particles=high porosity
Cockles are filter feeders, meaning they primarily eat plankton and other small particles found in the water. They use their siphons to draw in water and filter out food particles to consume.
The vacuum cleaner pushes out all of the air particles in the dust tank in it, forming a small vacuum, which pulls on to small weighting objects like dust, which gets absorbed into the tank, and can't go out because it is big to filter through holes like air particles do.
No, a solution consists of uniformly distributed particles that are too small to be seen with the naked eye. The particles in a solution are typically individual atoms, ions, or small molecules.
A filter paper should be enough to remove small particles suspended in water.
The Particles are too small to be filtered from water. The particles can fit through filter paper.
The oil traps small dirt particles from entering engine.
These are called cilia.