Search results for " Mercury"

showing 10 items of 72 documents

Biomethylation of Heavy Metals in Soil and Terrestrial Invertebrates

2009

Heavy metals play a prominent role in the lives of all organisms. They can be essential, as in the cases of iron, manganese, nickel and copper, which are needed to obtain proper enzyme conformation and reactivity. Some heavy metals are toxic to organisms, such as mercury or cadmium. Often, these metals are rarely accessible in their inorganic form. After biological transformation into organometallic compounds, they exhibit increased toxicity and penetration into animal tissue is facilitated. The alkylation mechanisms of metals (especially mercury) performed by aquatic microorganisms have been well documented. The organometallic food chain from fish to humans has also been investigated. Howe…

CadmiumFood chainchemistryMicroorganismEnvironmental chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementTerrestrial ecosystemSoil scienceHeavy metalsInorganic mercuryMercury (element)Invertebrate
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Substituent effect on the redox potential of substituted (aryl)(2-nitrobenzo[ b ]thiophen-3-yl)amines

2001

Abstract The electronic effect of some meta- or para-substituents on the reduction of the title compounds has been investigated. The reversible reduction potential values of these compounds have been evaluated by cyclic voltammetry at a mercury electrode in 0.1 M tetraethylammoniumtetrafluoroborate, dimethylsulfoxide solutions. The substituent effect depends on both its nature and its position. The reduction potential values of the derivatives studied have been correlated with the Hammett substituent constants.

ChemistryArylOrganic ChemistrySubstituentDropping mercury electrodeBiochemistryRedoxMedicinal chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundorganic electrochemistry substituents effect on thermodynamics redox processesDrug DiscoveryElectronic effectOrganic chemistryCyclic voltammetryTetrahedron
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Flow-through voltammetry (FTV) with the hanging mercury drop electrode (HMDE)

1995

A flow-through cell with integrated hanging mercury drop electrode for voltammetric, inverse voltammetric, adsorptive voltammetric, and chronoamperometric methods is described. HMDE droplets are automatically formed and renewed. By optimizing the flow-channel the sensitivity could be increased approximately five times in comparison with batch methods using the same deposition conditions.

ChemistryHanging mercury drop electrodeAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementBiochemistryVoltammetryAnalysis methodAnalytical ChemistryMercury (element)Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry
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Contribution to the adsorption voltammetric determination of manganese

1994

The adsorption voltammetric determination of Mn(II) with Bromopyrogallol Red (BPR) and Mordant Red 19 (MDR) has been investigated using a hanging drop mercury electrode. In NH3/NH4Cl solution, ligands and Mn(II) complexes give well separated voltammetric peaks after enrichment onto the electrode. The conditions for determining manganese by adsorption voltammetry with these reagents have been investigated in detail, as has the influence of foreign ions on the determination. The detection limits are 4·10−10 mol/L Mn for BPR and 8·10−10 mol/L Mn for MDR, respectively.

Detection limitBromopyrogallol redChromatographychemistry.chemical_elementMordantManganeseDropping mercury electrodeBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionchemistryReagentVoltammetryNuclear chemistryFresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry
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Study on the determination of trace rhenium (VII) by the adsorption differential pulse polarography

1989

The determination of trace rhenium (VII) by differential pulse polarography in the system of H2SO4-(NHsOH)2 · H2SO4-TeO2−4 is markedly improved by the addition of Nitron, which is adsorbed on the surface of mercury electrode. The limit of detection is down to 2 × 1010 M. The adsorptive peak potential is −0.80 V (vs. SCE). In the ranges of 5 × 1010—10−8, 1 × 10−5—10−7 and 1 × 10−7—10−6M, there are good linear relationships between the peak current increment and the concentration, of which the relative standard deviations are 9.5, 6.6, 1.8% respectively with the correlation coefficients of linear regression of 0.995–0.999. The results relating to this polarographic wave show that it is an ads…

Detection limitPolarographyAdsorptionChemistryInorganic chemistryElectrodeLinear regressionAnalytical chemistryPeak currentchemistry.chemical_elementGeneral ChemistryRheniumDropping mercury electrodeActa Chimica Sinica
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Voltammetric behavior and assay of the contraceptive drug levonorgestrel in bulk, tablets, and human serum at a mercury electrode.

2004

The cyclic voltammograms of levonorgestrel (LNG) in Britton-Robinson buffers of pH 2-11 at the hanging mercury drop electrode showed a single two-electron irreversible cathodic peak over the whole pH range. This peak may be attributed to the reduction of the 3-keto-delta-4-group in the A-ring of the LNG molecule. The interfacial adsorptive character of levonorgestrel onto the surface of the hanging mercury drop electrode was identified by means of both cyclic voltammetry and chronocoulometry techniques. A simple, sensitive, and selective square-wave adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetric procedure was developed for the quantitation of levonorgestrel. Under the optimized operational cond…

Detection limitendocrine systemChromatographyChemistrychemistry.chemical_elementPharmaceutical formulationDropping mercury electrodeAnalytical ChemistryMercury (element)Hanging mercury drop electrodeCathodic stripping voltammetrymedicineLevonorgestrelCyclic voltammetrymedicine.drugTalanta
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A Voltammetric Analysis of the Electrochemical Behaviour of Onium Salts at a Mercury Electrode

1980

An analysis of the cyclic voltammograms of the reduction of various onium salt at mercury, produced more detailed information concerning the nature of the reaction pathway, in terms of adsorption, amalgam formation and kinetics of electron transfer, and lead to an interpretation of the characteristic “inverted peak”. An “auto-catalytic” reaction mechanism was indicated, and in conjunction with the preparative experiments [1, 2] a full reduction scheme proposed for the sulphonium salt ([Ph2S+ CH3)]CIO−4) and the phosphonium salt ([Ph2P+ (CH3)2]Br−). Die Analyse der Cyclovoltammogramme der reduktiven Spaltung einiger Phosphonium- und Sulfoniumsaize unterrichtet uber die an der Quecksilberkath…

Electron transferReaction mechanismchemistry.chemical_compoundChemistryGeneral Chemical EngineeringInorganic chemistryPhosphonium saltOnium compoundPhosphoniumOniumDropping mercury electrodeElectrochemistryMedicinal chemistryBerichte der Bunsengesellschaft für physikalische Chemie
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Real-time measurements of gaseous elemental mercury at the summit area of Mt Etna volcano (Italy): preliminary results

2013

Etna gaseous elemental mercury
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Mercury contents and isotope ratios from diverse depositional environments across the Triassic–Jurassic Boundary: Towards a more robust mercury proxy…

2021

Abstract Mercury is gaining prominence as a proxy for large igneous province (LIP) volcanism in the sedimentary record. Despite temporal overlap between some mass extinctions and LIPs, the precise timing of magmatism relative to major ecological and environmental change is difficult to untangle, especially in marine settings. Changes in the relative contents of Hg in sedimentary rocks through time, or ‘Hg anomalies’, can help resolve the timing of LIP activity and marine extinctions. However, major questions remain unanswered about the fidelity of Hg as a proxy for LIP magmatism. In particular, depositional (e.g., redox) and post-depositional (e.g., oxidative weathering) processes can affec…

Extinction eventCarbonate platformLithologyStable isotope ratioLarge igneous provinceGeochemistryMercuryEnd–Triassic extinction Mercury isotope Triassic–Jurassic boundary MercuryEnd–Triassic extinction; Mercury; Mercury isotope; Triassic–Jurassic boundaryMercury isotopeSedimentary depositional environmentEnd–Triassic extinctionMagmatismGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesSedimentary rockTriassic–Jurassic boundaryGeologyEarth-Science Reviews
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Fluorescent Hg2+ Sensors: Synthesis and Evaluation of a Tren-Based Starburst Molecule Containing Fluorinated 1,2,4-Oxadiazoles.

2010

A new tren-based starburst molecule containing fluorinated 1,2,4-oxadiazoles as fluorophores has been synthesized and its sensing behavior toward several metal cations has been investigated by UV/Vis, fluorescence, 1 H NMR and 19 F NMR spectroscopy. Selective sensing for Hg 2+ ions through a PET-based mechanism was evidenced, suggesting application as fluorescent sensor for Hg 2+ of the off-on type.

FluorophoreStereochemistryOrganic ChemistryNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopySettore CHIM/06 - Chimica OrganicaPhotochemistryFluorescenceChemical synthesischemistry.chemical_compoundElectron transferchemistryProton NMRMoleculePhysical and Theoretical ChemistrySelectivity124-Oxadiazoles Sensors Electron transfer Fluorinated ligands Mercury
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