Quotation from: General Science

Written by: Bertha M. Clark


25. Distillation. If impure, muddy water is boiled, drops of water
will collect on a cold plate held in the path of the steam, but the
drops will be clear and pure. When impure water is boiled, the steam
from it does not contain any of the impurities because these are left
behind in the vessel. If all the water were allowed to boil away, a
layer of mud or of other impurities would be found at the bottom of
the vessel. Because of this fact, it is possible to purify water in a
very simple way. Place over a fire a large kettle closed except for a
spout which is long enough to reach across the stove and dip into a
bottle. As the liquid boils, steam escapes through the spout, and on
reaching the cold bottle condenses and drops into the bottle as pure
water. The impurities remain behind in the kettle. Water freed from
impurities in this way is called _distilled water_, and the process is
called _distillation_ (Fig. 19). By this method, the salt water of the
ocean may be separated into pure drinking water and salt, and many of
the large ocean liners distill from the briny deep all the drinking
water used on their ocean voyages.

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