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Sparging (chemistry)



In chemistry, sparging is a technique which involves bubbling a chemically inert gas, such as nitrogen, argon, or helium, through a liquid. This can be used to remove dissolved gases (e.g. oxygen) from the liquid.

Solvents used in HPLC are often sparged with helium gas.[1]

In chemical engineering, sparging can also be a method to remove low-boiling liquids from a solution. The low-boiling liquids tend to evaporate most quickly, hence it is removed from the bulk solution more quickly than the other components. It is an alternative to distillation, and it does not require heat.

This technique is also used in environmental chemistry to extract the oil contaminants from subsoil water and the ground.

See also

References

Translated from the French Wikipedia
  1. ^ M. W. Dong. "Precision in HPLC". Today's Chemist 9 (8): 28-32. American Chemical Society.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sparging_(chemistry)". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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