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desiccator

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
des·ic·cate  (ds-kt)
v. des·ic·cat·ed, des·ic·cat·ing, des·ic·cates
v.tr.
1. To dry out thoroughly.
2. To preserve (foods) by removing the moisture. See Synonyms at dry.
3. To make dry, dull, or lifeless.
v.intr.
To become dry; dry out.
adj. also (-kt)
Lacking spirit or animation; arid: "There was only the sun-bruised and desiccate feeling in his mind" (J.R. Salamanca).

[Latin dsiccre, dsicct- : d-, de- + siccre, to dry up (from siccus, dry).]

desic·cation n.
desic·cative adj.
desic·cator n.

desiccator [ˈdɛsɪˌkeɪtə]
n
1. (Cookery) any apparatus for drying milk, fruit, etc.
2. (Chemistry) an airtight box or jar containing a desiccant, used to dry chemicals and protect them from the water vapour in the atmosphere


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Thermal lamps, silicon moulds and a vigorous use of blenders, freezers and desiccators are common at elBulli, but Adria says his kitchen is far from being a science lab.
Then purified Na-montmorillonite clay was dried at 70[degrees]C and stored in a desiccator before next step.
 
 
 
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