Separation Techniques: Filtration and Evaporation
Ever wondered how water treatment plants remove dirt, or how you could separate salt from seawater? Filtration is your go-to method for separating insoluble solids from liquids. You simply use filter paper placed in a funnel - it's like a super-fine sieve that only lets tiny liquid particles through.
The process works because filter paper has microscopic holes. Liquid particles are small enough to pass through these holes, but larger solid particles get trapped. What passes through becomes the filtrate (the clean liquid), whilst what stays behind is called the residue (the solid bits you wanted to remove).
For separating soluble solids from liquids, evaporation does the trick brilliantly. Heat the mixture gently, and the water evaporates into steam, leaving solid crystals behind. You'll often use an evaporating basin over a Bunsen burner for this - just remember to keep the heat low to avoid splattering!
Quick Tip: Think of filtration like making coffee - the liquid coffee passes through the filter, but the coffee grounds stay behind as residue.