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Discover LudwigThe phrase "adsorbed from" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in scientific contexts, particularly in chemistry and materials science, to describe the process by which molecules adhere to a surface from a gas or liquid phase.
Example: "The contaminants were adsorbed from the water onto the activated carbon surface."
Alternatives: "sorbed from" or "taken from".
Exact(60)
The adsorption in which an adsorbate is adsorbed from the liquid phase onto the adsorbent particles involves three steps.
Acid green 25 (AG) dye was adsorbed from water by using polyaniline nanotubes (PANI NT) salt/silica composite as adsorbent.
In this process, ions are variously adsorbed from solution onto materials with ionic charges on their surface and separated from the rest of the sample.
They are applied by various techniques, but most belong to the basic class, which are adsorbed from solution by silk or wool, but have little affinity for cotton unless it has been treated with a mordant such as tannin.
A few of the anthraquinone vat dyes and some disperse dyes are also azo compounds; the latter are not water-soluble but can be suspended in water by soap and in that state are adsorbed from the suspension by cellulose acetate fibres.
Maximum fluoride was adsorbed from water at pH 5.8.
The water was adsorbed from the atmospheric humidity.
Moreover, most of the heavy metals were completely adsorbed from water (>99%) at pH ≥ 7.
Thus, small nanoparticles with light weight easily adsorbed from the aqueous phase.
Cu was firstly leached out and then selectively adsorbed from lixivium by using modified sugarcane bagasse (SCB) fixed-bed column.
Polymers adsorbed from solution onto pigments impart great influence on adhesion, pigment dispersion, rheology, foaming, wetting, and gloss in coatings.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com