When particulate materials such as rice or whole grains are passed through a sieve, their relatively large mass and smooth surface texture enable gravitational forces to dominate over any weak adhesive interactions with the mesh.
In contrast, flour consists of fine particles with a low mass-to-surface-area ratio. The resulting high specific surface area increases the relative significance of surface forces, including cohesion between particles and electrostatic adhesion to the sieve wires. These forces inhibit free flow, causing flour to aggregate and remain suspended in the mesh until agitation (like tapping or shaking) reduces these interactions and allows the particles to pass through.
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Tbh this is more fun than a phisycis lesson even though its phisycis
We notice the teeth dude
Why do you think the child is just waiting to eat and is not really interested in physics?
Same with some other flours and powdered sugars.
I know granular systems can have simmaler surface tension to liquids, so I always assumed it was "higher surface area higher surface tension"
Now do non-newtonian fluids with cornstarch slurry