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"fine filter" is a correct and usable term in written English.
It can be employed to describe a filter of small size or one that is used to separate out small particles or details. For example, "The company uses a series of fine filters to ensure that their product is up to the highest standard."
Exact(38)
He took all these elements and ran them through a fine filter so that he had only essence.
But when several gallons of the water were forced through a fine filter, tiny black oil droplets appeared.
But, invariably, these elements are run through a fine filter, so that what you see is an Armani look or a Saint Laurent look.
In recent years, eighty-four per cent of the Army's majors have been promoted to lieutenant colonel — hardly a fine filter.
While he has found a screen that would capture strands down to 1 micron – necessary to stop all microfibers – he is still experimenting with what forcing water through such a fine filter could do to laundry machine function.
In big commercial operations, by contrast, reserves of cream from industrial warehouses flow into large continuous churns, where they are forced through a fine filter and are extruded as butter -- at a rate of up to 22,000 pounds an hour.
Similar(21)
Since the early 1980's all commercial aircraft have used extremely fine filters to clean recirculating air -- with filter pores small enough to capture almost everything 0.3 microns or larger.
Big-brand honeys, however, may well have been heated so that they'll be able to pass through very fine filters, which can affect flavour, and many are blends, to ensure greater consistency of flavour.
These huge mammals and other baleen whales (order Mysticeti), which are distinguished by fine filtering plates in their mouths, feed on plankton and micronekton as do whale sharks (Rhinocodon typus), the largest fish in the world (usually 12 to 14 metres long, with some reaching 17 metres).
Handling of large amounts of reactive pyrolysis char powders requires careful technical control of safety hazards like potential self-ignition, dust explosions, or inhalation of fine, filter-penetrating char dust.
Scientists first suspected these macromolecules existed back in 1861, when they found that dissolved cellulose and starches clogged fine filters.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com