Filtration | MIT Digital Lab Techniques Manual
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- Опубліковано 28 лип 2024
- Filtration
The easiest way to separate a liquid from a solid? Filtration! Learn how to effectively carry out gravity and vacuum filtrations in this video.
Created by Dr. Sarah Tabacco and Aaeyesha Siddiqui
View the complete resource at: ocw.mit.edu/resources/res-5-00...
License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA
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The experiments described in these materials are potentially hazardous and require a high level of safety training, special facilities and equipment, and supervision by appropriate individuals. You bear the sole responsibility, liability, and risk for the implementation of such safety procedures and measures. MIT shall have no responsibility, liability, or risk for the content or implementation of any of the material presented. Legal Notice - ocw.mit.edu/terms/
The video quality is like the vacuum filtration....
okay, if you rinse your residual with solvent, wont your finished product have solvent in it, so would you distill the the solvent
she's such an icon
It sounds like Franz Liszt in all of the music in these videos, maybe I am wrong maybe it is Debussy.
Hello!
7:16 I don't get the joke here. Could someone explain?
It was like she was holding something too heavy
It's a higher science joke, you wouldn't get it.
@@Chris-ni6pv Its some kind of science joke hes too american to understand
@@thered4048 lol imagine talking shit in the comments of a 10 year old chemistry tutorial
@Jhon Smith You can purify by using something that causes impurities to precipitate out… a lot of effort where there are often easier methods, to be sure, but nonetheless…
… what was your target audience for this video? I feel like I was just in the Romper Room Chem Lab. Seriously, I feel like the authors thought I was 8; I found the level of condescension actually distracting from the content of the video.
I was assigned to watch this video for a junior-level college chem class. I'm left thinking: "What the *&%! was that, and why did I have to suffer through this? This came from MIT? What happened?"
I seriously don't mean to offend; I just *really* dislike being patronized.
Same buddy