235k views
5 votes
Brownian motion cannot be detected in colloids. True or false?

User Classified
by
8.0k points

1 Answer

7 votes
Brownian motion is the random movement of colloidal particles suspended in a fluid. It is caused by random collisions of the molecules in the fluid medium. The particles in the solution or colloids are in constant random movement. A colloid has properties boundary to a homogenous and heterogeneous mixture. However in Brownian movement, the larger the size of a particle, the lesser its motion and the smaller the size of the particle, the higher is motion. Colloids in general have larger particle size and therefore it Brownian motion is sluggish. The statement is false.
User David Robbins
by
8.1k points

Related questions

asked Sep 27, 2018 124k views
Shmakova asked Sep 27, 2018
by Shmakova
8.9k points
1 answer
5 votes
124k views
asked Aug 2, 2018 81.4k views
Janmejay asked Aug 2, 2018
by Janmejay
8.5k points
1 answer
4 votes
81.4k views