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Dispersed

Dispersed is an adjective meaning spread out or distributed over a wide area. It derives from the verb disperse, which comes from Latin dispergere, meaning to scatter apart. In everyday language, it describes objects, populations, or materials that are not concentrated but spread rather than grouped.

In science, dispersed describes a two-phase system in which particles of a dispersed phase are distributed

In ecology and geography, dispersed describes patterns of spatial distribution. A population may be dispersed, spread

In organizational contexts, dispersed can describe teams or offices that operate across multiple locations rather than

within
a
continuous
medium.
Typical
examples
are
colloids
(such
as
milk
or
fog),
emulsions
(oil
droplets
in
water),
and
suspensions
(sand
in
water).
Particle
size
generally
places
dispersed
materials
in
the
nanometer
to
micrometer
range.
The
stability
and
appearance
of
dispersed
systems
depend
on
interactions
between
phases
and
on
stabilizers
that
prevent
aggregation,
such
as
electrostatic
or
steric
barriers.
Key
terms
include
the
dispersed
phase
and
the
continuous
phase;
concentration,
particle
size,
and
the
nature
of
the
interfaces
influence
rheology
and
optical
properties.
out,
or
evenly
distributed
rather
than
clustered.
Species
can
show
random,
uniform,
or
clumped
arrangements,
influenced
by
resources,
competition,
and
movement.
Seed
dispersal,
animal
migrations,
and
human
transport
affect
dispersion.
In
urban
planning
and
human
geography,
a
dispersed
settlement
describes
a
pattern
where
buildings
are
spread
across
the
landscape
rather
than
concentrated
in
a
town
center.
from
a
single
centralized
hub.
The
term
is
often
contrasted
with
centralized
or
clustered
arrangements.
Related
concepts
include
diffusion,
dispersion,
and
distribution,
which
describe
how
substances,
ideas,
or
populations
spread
over
space
and
time.