ELI5: Explain Like I'm 5

COLEX process

Okay kiddo, let me explain the colex process in a way you can easily understand.

Imagine you have a big pile of rocks and you want to separate them based on their color. You have red rocks, blue rocks, and green rocks, but you want to only have piles of each color.

The colex process works similarly, but instead of rocks, it separates chemicals based on their properties.

First, the chemicals are mixed together and heated up until they turn into a gas. This gas is then cooled down very quickly, which turns it back into a liquid.

As it cools, the different chemicals solidify at different temperatures. This means that the chemicals with a certain property will solidify first, while the others will stay liquid for a bit longer.

When the first set of chemicals solidifies, they are scooped out and separated from the rest. Then, the process is repeated with the remaining liquid chemicals until they are all separated based on their properties.

And that's the colex process in a nutshell! It's like sorting rocks by color, but with chemicals and temperatures.