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Colloid vs Bidisperse - What's the difference?

colloid | bidisperse |

As adjectives the difference between colloid and bidisperse

is that colloid is glue-like; gelatinous while bidisperse is (physics) describing a colloid in which the disperse phase particles are of two different sizes.

As a noun colloid

is (chemistry) a stable system of two phases, one of which is dispersed in the other in the form of very small droplets or particles.

colloid

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Glue-like; gelatinous.
  • colloid tumours

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (chemistry) A stable system of two phases, one of which is dispersed in the other in the form of very small droplets or particles.
  • (meteorology) An intimate mixture of two substances one of which, called the dispersed phase (or colloid ), is uniformly distributed in a finely divided state throughout the second substance, called the dispersion medium (or dispersing medium). The dispersion medium may be a gas, a liquid, or a solid, and the dispersed phase may also be any of these, with the exception that one does not speak of a colloidal system of one gas in another. A system of liquid or solid particles colloidally dispersed in a gas is called an aerosol. A system of solid substances or water-insoluble liquids colloidally dispersed in liquid water is called a hydrosol.
  • (geology) A particle less than 1 micron in diameter, following the Wentworth scale
  • Derived terms

    * colloidal

    See also

    * solid sol solid in solid * sol solid in liquid * aerosol solid or liquid in gas * gel liquid in solid * emulsion liquid in liquid * foam gas in liquid or solid * aerogel gas in solid

    bidisperse

    English

    Adjective

    (-)
  • (physics) Describing a colloid in which the disperse phase particles are of two different sizes