Suspension (chemistry)
A suspension ( Latin suspendere , to hang up , to let it in suspension) is a heterogeneous mixture of substances made up of a liquid and solid bodies (particles) finely distributed in it . A suspension is a coarsely dispersed dispersion and tends to sediment and phase separate. The solids are "suspended" in the liquid phase .
In materials science or in natural occurrences, suspensions in water are also referred to as slurries or (from English) slurry . They are divided into “coarse” suspensions (particle size 0.1 mm to 1 mm, e.g. chalk sludge) and “fine” suspensions (particle size 1 µm to 100 µm, e.g. milk of lime). Even more finely dispersed particles (smaller than 1 µm) are dispersions, smaller than 1 nm are molecular dispersions.
Suspensions or dispersions in polymer chemistry are finely dispersed polymer products obtained by suspension polymerization , for example polyacrylates or vinyl acetates .
sedimentation
If a suspension is left to stand, a solid with a greater density than the pure liquid (in contrast to a solution ) sinks slowly to the bottom and forms a sediment (sedimentation) with the particle size not too small . The supernatant liquid can be poured off ( decanted ) and thus the solid (sediment) separated from the liquid (decantate) . By adding so-called thixotropic agents or surface-active substances , sedimentation can be slowed down, and by adding flocculants it can be accelerated.
The stability of a suspension can be defined with a sedigraph . This measures the sinking speed of different particles according to Stokes' law .
The smaller a particle, the lower its density and the higher the viscosity of the liquid, the slower the sedimentation takes place. The shape and structure of the particles and other properties of the particles and liquid also influence sedimentation.
The sedimentation can be accelerated by centrifugation .
One method for determining the material properties or the particle size and their distribution is ultrasonic attenuation spectroscopy .
Examples
Examples of suspensions are:
- Slurries of sand in sea water, suspended matter , or quicksand
- Mortar or concrete (mineral suspensions)
- Suspensions made of silicon carbide and polyethylene glycol , which have an abrasive and cooling effect at the same time , are used in the photovoltaic and semiconductor industries to cut pure silicon into wafers .
- Top coat , paint ( pigment suspensions , differentiated from dyes that go into solution)
- blood
- the photosensitive photographic layer on film or photographic paper . It is in the technical language (incorrectly) as " emulsion is referred to" as originally a silver nitrate solution and potassium bromide solution in liquid gelatin was emulsified on glass plates or photographic paper applied; But silver nitrate and potassium bromide from reacting to water-insoluble light-sensitive silver bromide , which in liquid and gel state a suspension in gelatin results.
- Pollen in aqueous honey solutions that for microscopic Palynologie be made
- Wheat beer
- orange juice
- Drilling fluid
The liquid part of the suspension is often not a pure substance, but in turn a mixture: The carrier liquid can also be a solution , an emulsion or an unsedimented dispersion . Example: In sweetened milk cocoa, particles of cocoa components are suspended in a liquid that is an aqueous sugar solution and at the same time an aqueous fat emulsion. A sugared cocoa drink is therefore a "dispersion in a sugar solution".
Cow's milk is a dispersion of milk fat and protein in water. Other suspensions that look “milky” are also called “-milk”, for example
- Glacier milk , a slurry of rock debris in glacier water,
- Lime milk , a suspension of slaked lime in water,
- Scouring milk , powdery scouring agents mixed with surfactant solutions or solvents.
Suspensions in pharmaceuticals
For medical suspensions, insoluble powders such as pharmaceuticals are suspended in carrier liquids. In contrast to a complete solution , the immiscibility of the constituents can lead to segregation due to the sinking of the solid particles due to gravity . From a macroscopic point of view, suspensions are therefore only homogeneous if they can be shaken up easily and quickly.
Such suspensions are used either externally or internally, for example on the skin, on the eye, in the body orifices or also intramuscularly.
Classification in the scheme of chemical substances
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See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Gerhart Jander, Ewald Blasius: Textbook of analytical and preparative inorganic chemistry. Except for the quantitative analysis . 12th edition. 1983, ISBN 3-7776-0439-9 , pp. 91 .
- ↑ Use of used slurry for wire sawing without reprocessing. .