Colloid

mixture of an insoluble substance microscopically dispersed throughout another substance

A colloid is a mixture of one substance spread out evenly inside another substance. They can be in two different phases or states of matter.

Vintage cranberry glass bowl
Not milk, but flour suspended in water

One substance is the dispersion medium, such as water or gas. The other is the dispersed medium, sometimes called the 'internal phase'. This is usually tiny solid particles. Otherwise, if the dispersion medium is a gas, then the internal phase can be either tiny particles or tiny droplets of a liquid.

Definition: A colloid is a substance microscopically dispersed evenly throughout another substance.[1] The dispersed-phase particles have a diameter between about 5 and 200 nanometers.[2]

Examples:

  1. Milk is an emulsion, which is a colloid in which both parties are liquids.
  2. Shaving cream and whipped cream are colloids of gas inside a liquid.
  3. Gels, such as agar, jelly or even opals, are colloids of liquids inside solids.
  4. Styrofoam and pumice are gases inside solids.
  5. The red colour of cranberry glass is caused by the reflection of light off gold particles in the glass. The glass is a colloid of solid particles inside the solid glass.
  6. Mud is usually considered a suspension because the dirt will settle, but it may be a partial colloid, particularly with very fine-grained clay.[3]
  7. Fog is a complex mixture in which air has both water droplets and solid particles. It may be colloidal in parts.

References

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  1. "Colloid". Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2009-08-31.
  2. Levine, Ira N. (2001). Physical Chemistry (5th ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-231808-2., p. 955
  3. With a natural substance, it may be only partly colloidal.