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  2. Decanter centrifuge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decanter_Centrifuge

    The rate at which sedimentation occurs is an important characteristic of the decanter centrifuge separation process. The sedimentation rate is influenced by the particle size, the shapes of the particles, their density differential between solid and liquid and the viscosity of the liquid. This process characteristic can be improved by utilizing ...

  3. Svedberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svedberg

    A laboratory ultracentrifuge. In chemistry, a Svedberg unit or svedberg (symbol S, sometimes Sv [a]) is a non-SI metric unit for sedimentation coefficients.The Svedberg unit offers a measure of a particle's size indirectly based on its sedimentation rate under acceleration (i.e. how fast a particle of given size and shape settles out of suspension). [1]

  4. Sedimentation coefficient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentation_coefficient

    The sedimentation coefficient is typically dependent on the concentration of the solute (i.e. a macromolecular solute such as a protein). Despite 80+ years of study, there is not yet a consensus on the way to perfectly model this relationship while also taking into account all possible non-ideal terms to account for the diverse possible sizes, shapes, and densities of molecular solutes. [2]

  5. Centrifugation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrifugation

    Through a series of experiments utilizing the sedimentation equilibrium technique, two important observations were made: hemoglobin has a molecular weight of 68,000 Da, suggesting that there are four iron atoms present rather than one, and that, no matter where the hemoglobin was isolated from, it had exactly the same molecular weight.

  6. Sedimentation equilibrium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentation_equilibrium

    The advantage of using analytical sedimentation equilibrium analysis for Molecular Weight of proteins and their interacting mixtures is the avoidance of need for derivation of a frictional coefficient, otherwise required for interpretation of dynamic sedimentation. Sedimentation equilibrium can be used to determine molecular mass.

  7. Lamella clarifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamella_clarifier

    The surface loading rate (also known as surface overflow rate or surface settling rate) for a lamella clarifier falls between 10 and 25 m/h. For these settling rates, the retention time in the clarifier is low, at around 20 minutes or less, [ 7 ] with operating capacities tending to range from 1–3 m 3 /hour/m 2 (of projected area).

  8. Settling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Settling

    Settling pond for iron particles at water works. Settling is the process by which particulates move towards the bottom of a liquid and form a sediment.Particles that experience a force, either due to gravity or due to centrifugal motion will tend to move in a uniform manner in the direction exerted by that force.

  9. Sedimentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentation

    The rate of sedimentation is the thickness of sediment accumulated per unit time. [8] For suspended load, this can be expressed mathematically by the Exner equation . [ 9 ] Rates of sedimentation vary from less than 3 millimeters (0.12 in) per thousand years for pelagic sediment to several meters per thousand years in portions of major river ...