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A slurry is a mixture, which comes in different varieties:

  • Metal Slurry can be used in pipe fitting and other welding tasks, as well as slurry based bombs like the BLU-82.

  • In farming—perhaps the most well-known use—farm slurry is a mixture composed chiefly of water and animal sewage. It has a distinct odour, noticeable when the substance is carried in tankers, or spread over fields. Misapplication of farm slurry can lead to environmentally damaging emissions of ammonia and other chemicals. See fertilizer.

  • A special kind of slurry consisting of approximately 1% pulp (wood fiber) and 99% water, used to make paper, is called stock in the papermaking industry.

  • Slurry pipelines are a specialized method of material transport that use a watery slurry to move particulates from one location to another.

  • In cooking, particularly in restaurant kitchens, slurry refers to a mixture of a thickening agent (often cornstarch) and water, as a means of dispersing the thickener into hot sauces and soups near the end of the cooking process without forming lumps. Slurry can also refer to the mixture of coffee grounds and water in some kinds of brewing processes, such as a french press.

  • Meat slurry is a product made from meats, making them more readily transportable, as well as removing fats, pigmentation and myoglobin.

  • In mining, slurry is a sort of liquid waste material that's stored elsewhere.

  • The word 'slurry' itself is also used in Australian slang to describe an individual who is a sexually promiscious (not to be mixed with the word 'slut'). The word descends from two words, 'durry' (Australian slang for cigarette) and 'slut'. The word was first used by teenagers in the northern suburbs of Perth to describe a specefic group of people, paticularly females, who spent most of their social time in the city centre smoking cigarettes

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Slurry".

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