A funnel is used to transfer liquids from one container to another without spilling.
There are many kinds of funnels, transferring liquids is only one use. Funnels also provide support for several kinds of filtering procedures. There are hundreds of different kinds of filter paper in different materials and sizes of pores that let different sizes of particles through, different sizes of circles of material that are put into flat bottomed funnels, folded into triangular shaped funnels, and inserted into vacuum setups.
There is a kind of funnel with a wide stem, instead of the narrow stem for liquid transfer. These are called powder funnels, and are used, logically enough, to transfer powders into narrow necked vessels such as flasks or bottles of various types after being weighed out on a scale to make up a solution. Used for filtration or the delivery of liquids.
A funnel allows you to pour from one container into another container with a narrower opening without spilling over the edges.
fun·nel [fúnn'l]noun (pluralfun·nels)
1.utensil used in pouring liquids: a cone-shaped utensil with a large opening at the top and a small opening or tube at the bottom. Use: to guide liquids and other substances into containers.2.chimney: a vertical pipe from which smoke and exhaust gases escape, especially one on a steamship or steam engineverb (past and past participlefun·neled, present participle fun·nel·ing, 3rd person present singular fun·nels)
1.transitive and intransitive verb move into narrow space: to move into and through a narrow space, or direct something into and through a narrow space
[15th century. Via Provençal fonilh < Latin infundibulum < infundere "pour in" < fundere "pour"]
It is used just how you would expect: if you are poring some fluid from a beaker into something very small like a tube or measuring cylinder. It helps especially if the liquid is expensive or dangerous to prevent any waste!
It is used just how you would expect: if you are poring some fluid from a beaker into something very small like a tube or measuring cylinder. It helps especially if the liquid is expensive or dangerous to prevent any waste!
Funnels can be used in the laboratory for transferring solutions from one place to another. They can also be used to filer out solutions.
a funnel is used when trying to pour one thing into another
The funnel is used to separate solids from liquids. Many types of funnels are known: see catalogs of laboratory accessories.
To pour liquids. When a filter paper is inserted, it is used to separate liquid from solid.
Glass or plastic standard funnels: conical with a long stem.Tap funnels for controlling the addition of liquids.Solid funnels: with a short stem to deliver powders without clogging.Sintered glass funnels used in quantitative analysis.Micro funnels for small scale work.Separating funnels which have a tap and a fitted stopper.
The iron ring is a support for laboratory glassware as for ex. funnels.
Yes, borax, is used as a flux in chemical laboratories.
it is a valve made of glass often used in laboratory glasswares such as separatory funnels, burets, etc.
Cyclobutane is used as reagent in organic chemistry laboratories.
Glass or plastic standard funnels: conical with a long stem.Tap funnels for controlling the addition of liquids.Solid funnels: with a short stem to deliver powders without clogging.Sintered glass funnels used in quantitative analysis.Micro funnels for small scale work.Separating funnels which have a tap and a fitted stopper.
how many funnels (smoke stacks) did the titanic have?
A funnel is used to separate an insoluble solid from a liquid.
it is used to transfer a substance in one container to another.
Resistors are like funnels, they restrict the flow of current.
Clamps and ring stands are used to hold glassware and apparatuses in place. For example, clamps are frequently used to hold round-bottom flasks, condensers, thermometers, addition funnels, etc. Ring stands may be used for larger diameter items, including separatory funnels, filter funnels, wire gauze etc.
Ships funnels don't, but some pouring funnels do.
The iron ring is a support for laboratory glassware as for ex. funnels.
Yes funnels is a noun, a plural noun. Funnels is also a verb. Example uses:As a noun: We need canning funnels to pour the fruit into the jars.As a verb: He funnels too much money into the vacation fund and too little into the home repair fund.
They were four, Three were real, the fourth one was a dummy. It was only there to make the ship look more powerful
Berkelium is used only laboratories for research.
Berkelium is used now only in research laboratories.