Separation Turns on Diversity of Properties.
Let us note how diverse substances are separated from one another by taking hold of differences in their properties. When a handful of grain which has just passed under a flail is thrown upward in a breeze, its chaff is blown much farther than the grain; the difference in breadth of surface, joined to a difference in density, enables the wind to effect a thorough separation. A common fanning mill, with its quick air current, works much better than the fitful wind, because continuously. That simple machine, like every other which takes a mixture and separates its ingredients, seizes upon a difference in properties. In Edison’s apparatus for removing iron from sand or dust, a series of powerful magnets overhang a stream of sand or powdered material, deflecting the iron particles so that they fall into a bin by themselves, while the trash goes into an adjoining larger bin. The Hungarian process of flour-milling first crushes wheat through rollers; the various products are then separated by processes which lay hold of differences in specific gravity—often but slight.
A feat more difficult than that of the Hungarian mill would seem to be the division of diamonds from other stones. It has been accomplished by Mr. Frederick Kersten of Kimberley, South Africa. He noticed one day at his elbow a rough diamond and a garnet on a board. He raised one end of this board, and while the garnet slipped off, the diamond remained undisturbed. What was the reason? He observed that the wood bore a coating of grease, which possibly had held the diamond while the garnet had slipped away. He took a wider board, greased it, and dropped upon it a handful of small stones, some of which were rough diamonds. He found that by inclining the board a little, and vibrating it carefully, all the stones but the diamonds fell off, while the diamonds stuck to the grease. He forthwith built a machine with a greasy board as its separator, and scored a success.
On quite a different plan is built the coal washer which separates coal from slate. Pulses of water are sent upward through a sieve so as to strike a broken mixture of coal and slate, making a quicksand of the mass. Because the slate is heavier than the coal it is not carried so far, and is therefore caught in a separate stream and thrown away.