Chemistry, asked by sweta431573, 3 months ago

Write an experiment on Hand Sieving​

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High accuracy, low investment cost, and ease of handling make sieve analysis a commonly used procedure for ...

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Sieve analysis

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A sieve analysis (or gradation test) is a practice or procedure used (commonly used in civil engineering) to assess the particle size distribution (also called gradation) of a granular material by allowing the material to pass through a series of sieves of progressively smaller mesh size and weighing the amount of material that is stopped by each sieve as a fraction of the whole mass.

Granulometry

Sample Net-withGraphic.png

Basic concepts

Particle size · Grain size

Size distribution · Morphology

Methods and techniques

Mesh scale · Optical granulometry

Sieve analysis · Soil gradation

Related concepts

Granulation · Granular material

Mineral dust · Pattern recognition

Dynamic light scattering

vte

The size distribution is often of critical importance to the way the material performs in use. A sieve analysis can be performed on any type of non-organic or organic granular materials including sands, crushed rock, clays, granite, feldspars, coal, soil, a wide range of manufactured powders, grain and seeds, down to a minimum size depending on the exact method. Being such a simple technique of particle sizing, it is probably the most common.[1]

Procedure

Results

Methods

Types of gradation

Types of sieves

Limitations of sieve analysis

Properties

Engineering applications

See also

References

External links

Last edited 18 days ago by WikiCleanerBot

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Mesh (scale)

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