Chemistry, asked by anshikagupta83, 6 months ago

what kind of solution is Milk? What happens when such a solution is filtered?​

Answers

Answered by saurabh363590
9

Answer:

Although it appears to be homogeneous, milk is actually not a solution - it is a colloid. This is because many of the particles in milk (like the fat and protein globules) are > 1 nm. In fact, this is make evident by the fact that they settle to the bottom after a while.

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Answered by hastag8
1

Answer:

Milk is a colloid

it would become a solution

Explanation:

Milk is not a solution because it has more than one phase suspended in it -- it has a liquid phase and a solid phase. Unhomogenized milk is not a solution, it's a suspension because the fat (aka cream) will separate from the rest of the milk and rise to the top, since fat is less dense than water.

Although it appears to be homogeneous, milk is actually not a solution - it is a colloid. This is because many of the particles in milk (like the fat and protein globules) are > 1 nm. In fact, this is make evident by the fact that they settle to the bottom after a while.

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