Filtration
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Filtration is a way to separate solids from liquids or gases. It works by passing the mixture through a special material called a filter. The filter lets the liquid or gas pass through but keeps the solid particles back. The solid that stays on the filter is called the “oversize.” The liquid or gas that passes through is called the “filtrate.”
We use filtration in many everyday situations. For example, when you drain cooking water from pasta using a colander, you are filtering. Oil filtration removes impurities from oil to help machines run better and last longer.
Filtration also happens in nature and in living things. Some animals, like the basking shark and baleen whales, are filter feeders. They eat by filtering small food particles from the water. Tiny organisms, such as Vorticella, also use filtration to get their food. Filters can clean water, like in slow sand filters and trickling filters, by removing unwanted things from the water.
Physical processes
Filtration is a way to separate solid particles from fluids like liquids or gases. You pass the mixture through a filter. The fluid goes through, but the solid particles stay behind. This process is used in many places, such as chemical engineering. It helps separate different materials.
There are many methods of filtration for different purposes. In labs, hot filtration keeps solutions warm. Cold filtration cools the solution quickly. Vacuum filtration uses suction to speed things up. Gravity filtration lets the liquid flow down naturally. Filters can be made from different materials, like mesh or depth filters. Sometimes, special substances are added to help filtration work better.
Biological filtration
Biological filtration can happen inside living things or on materials that are being cleaned. It helps remove tiny bits of solids, drops, and chemicals by processes like eating, sticking, or absorbing them. Because living things work in complex ways, it is hard to know exactly how the filtration happens. At a very small level, it might be due to special substances inside individual organisms. The waste from some organisms can be broken down by others to create simple substances like water, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen.
In animals like mammals, reptiles, and birds, the kidneys help remove unwanted substances like urea through a process called renal filtration. This is part of excretion through urination. Even simple organisms like protozoa have ways to remove waste, such as using a contractile vacuole. Biofilms are groups of tiny living things that form layers on surfaces, helping to clean water in places like rivers and in water treatment systems. Filter feeders, such as some protozoa, rotifers, and arthropods, get their food by filtering particles from water using special body parts like cilia or webs.
Main article: Renal physiology § Filtration
Main article: Biofilm
Main article: Filter feeders
Examples
Filtration is used in many everyday processes to separate solids from liquids or gases. For example, a coffee filter separates coffee grounds from the liquid coffee. HEPA filters in air conditioning remove tiny particles from the air to keep it clean.
Other examples include belt filters used in mining to extract valuable materials, air filters in cars and buildings to clean the air, and aquarium filters to keep water clean for fish. In laboratories, a Büchner funnel with filter paper is often used to separate solids from liquids during experiments.
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