Anmelden

Filtration is a physical separation process that involves passing a suspension through a porous medium to separate solids from fluids. During filtration, solids collect on the porous medium while liquids, also collectively known as the filtrate, pass through. The filtration medium is selected based on the filtration purpose, quantity, and nature of the precipitate. The general criteria for a suitable filtering medium are that it is inert, mechanically strong, nonabsorbent toward dissolved materials and permissive toward rapid filtration.

The simplest filtration apparatus consists of filter paper fitted in a long-stemmed funnel sitting above a beaker. The solution to be filtered is poured down a glass rod onto the filter paper. The filtrate is collected in the beaker, and the solid is retained on the filter paper. Any solid that adheres to the glass rod or the beaker with the original solution is dislodged using a rubber policeman. Because filter paper is hygroscopic, ashless or low-ash filter paper is preferred when weighing is required. Ashless filter paper is also employed in gravimetric procedures that involve igniting the solids before weighing.

Alternatively, the solid can be collected in glass or silica crucibles containing a porous glass disc. The solid is transferred to the crucible fitted into a Buchner flask, and filtration is performed under suction. After filtration, the crucible is dried and weighed directly. The weight difference of the crucible before and after filtration gives the mass of the collected solid.

Tags
FiltrationPhysical SeparationPorous MediumSolidsFluidsFiltrateFiltering MediumFilter PaperFiltration ApparatusSuction FiltrationGravimetric ProceduresAshless Filter PaperBuchner FlaskRubber Policeman

Aus Kapitel 4:

article

Now Playing

4.3 : Filtration

Introduction to Separation Methods

683 Ansichten

article

4.1 : States of Matter and Phase Changes

Introduction to Separation Methods

830 Ansichten

article

4.2 : Distillation: Vapor–Liquid Equilibria

Introduction to Separation Methods

2.5K Ansichten

article

4.4 : Centrifugation

Introduction to Separation Methods

1.9K Ansichten

article

4.5 : Sublimation

Introduction to Separation Methods

649 Ansichten

article

4.6 : Recrystallization: Solid–Solution Equilibria

Introduction to Separation Methods

954 Ansichten

article

4.7 : Crystal Growth: Principles of Crystallization

Introduction to Separation Methods

1.3K Ansichten

article

4.8 : Precipitation and Co-precipitation

Introduction to Separation Methods

1.5K Ansichten

article

4.9 : Coagulation

Introduction to Separation Methods

226 Ansichten

article

4.10 : Electrodeposition

Introduction to Separation Methods

348 Ansichten

article

4.11 : Extraction: Partition and Distribution Coefficients

Introduction to Separation Methods

1.4K Ansichten

article

4.12 : Extraction: Effects of pH

Introduction to Separation Methods

304 Ansichten

article

4.13 : Extraction: Advanced Methods

Introduction to Separation Methods

280 Ansichten

article

4.14 : Chromatography: Introduction

Introduction to Separation Methods

2.5K Ansichten

article

4.15 : Dialysis

Introduction to Separation Methods

505 Ansichten

See More

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten