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sieven

Sieven is a technique used to separate and classify particles in a granular or powdered material by passing the material through a sieve with openings of specified size. The material that is larger than the openings is retained, while finer particles pass through to the next sieving stage. The process is used in both dry and wet contexts and can be performed manually or with mechanical equipment.

Equipment and procedure: Sieve stacks or nest sets consist of sequential screens with progressively smaller openings.

Sizes and standards: Openings are described in millimeters, micrometers, or sieve numbers. Nesting allows multi-stage classification

Applications: Sieven is used in food production (separating flour, sugar, spices), agriculture and seed cleaning, soil

Limitations and notes: Sieving is less effective for extremely fine powders or highly cohesive materials and

Commonly
a
sieve
shaker
or
vibrator
is
used
to
promote
separation;
manual
shaking
or
tapping
can
suffice
for
small
samples.
Wet
sieving
may
be
employed
for
sticky
or
clayey
materials,
with
the
liquid
helping
to
separate
particles.
from
coarsest
to
finest.
Standards
such
as
ISO
3310-1
or
ASTM
E11
define
test
sieves,
aperture
tolerances,
and
testing
procedures
to
ensure
repeatability.
texture
analysis,
mining
and
mineral
processing,
pharmaceutical
granulation,
and
construction
aggregate
quality
control.
may
cause
particle
breakage
or
encrusting;
accuracy
depends
on
operator
technique,
sample
dryness,
and
proper
calibration.
Alternatives
include
filtration,
sedimentation,
and
centrifugation.