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Opposite of a centrifuge?

 
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Jul16-12, 09:39 AM   #1
 

Opposite of a centrifuge?


Hey all, first post here on PF.

This might be a stupid question, but I haven't been able to find if there is a machine that does the opposite of a centrifuge, specifically forcing material into the center of a circle. Or if there is a force that is reproducible on a small scale that does this.

Again, sorry if this is silly, but I'm thinking of making something and this is kind of crucial!

Thanks!
 
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Jul16-12, 01:36 PM   #2
 
Seems to me you could use a centrifuge that has capsules at the end of it. The heavier material is forced into the center bottom dome of the capsule.
 
Jul16-12, 01:51 PM   #3
 
I can think of two examples:
1) Using high explosives (ie Nuclear Bomb ignition)
2) Using high energy lasers to detonate the surface of a fuel pellet (ie Fusion research)

If you have a particular application in mind it might be easier to come up with something more practical?
 
Jul16-12, 02:00 PM   #4
 

Opposite of a centrifuge?


It depends on how much stuff, how quickly, etc.

A funnel forces everything to the center of a "circle".
 
Jul17-12, 12:06 AM   #5
 
Quote by Travis_King View Post

A funnel forces everything to the center of a "circle".
Dang, how'd we miss that one!? D'oh!!

Travis King is in beast mode.
 
Jul17-12, 01:13 AM   #6
 
EMF in a ring around the substance you want pushed to the center.
 
Jul17-12, 01:36 AM   #7
 
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Jul17-12, 10:57 PM   #8
 
A centrifuge does it... The lighter material moves toward the center. ;-)
 
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