Syneresis (chemistry)

Syneresis (also spelled 'synæresis' or 'synaeresis'), in chemistry, is the extraction or expulsion of a liquid from a gel, such as when serum drains from a contracting clot of blood. Another example of syneresis is the collection of whey on the surface of yogurt. Syneresis can also be observed when the amount of diluent in a swollen polymer exceeds the solubility limit as the temperature changes. A household example of this is the counterintuitive expulsion of water from dry gelatin when the temperature increases. Syneresis has also been proposed as the mechanism of formation for the amorphous silica composing the frustule of diatoms.[1]

  1. ^ Grachev, Mikhail A; Vadim V Annenkov; Yelena V Likhoshway (April 2008). "Silicon nanotechnologies of pigmented heterokonts". BioEssays. 30 (4): 328–37. doi:10.1002/bies.20731. ISSN 1521-1878. PMID 18348175. S2CID 20984160.

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