Search results for "Bromocresol purple"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Determination of Amitriptyline with Bromocresol Purple and Flow Injection Analysis

1990

Abstract The study of some amitriptyline-dye systems was carried out in order to determine the best precipitate for the turbidimetric determination of amitriptyline using FIA. The reagent selected was bromocresol purple. The chemical and FIA variables were optimized. The calibration graph was linear over the concentration range 30.0–200.0 ppm of amitriptyline hydrochloride. Some interfering substances were also investigated.

Flow injection analysisChromatographyAmitriptyline HydrochlorideChemistryCalibration curveBiochemistry (medical)Clinical BiochemistryBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundReagentElectrochemistrymedicineAmitriptylineBromocresol purpleSpectroscopymedicine.drugAnalytical Letters
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Detection and correction of interferences in spectroscopy techniques

2001

By combining the apparent content curves method and the Youden method, we have developed a strategy for detecting constant and proportional errors in spectroscopy techniques. A method for elimination of spectral interferences (different of blank) is also proposed. To apply of this method there must be a matrix effect that varies with the amount of sample or a simulated matrix effect provided working under different experimental conditions that induce a variation of the analytical signal of the analyte. The proposed procedures have been applied to the determination of methyl orange in presence of phenol red, bromothymol blue and bromocresol purple.

Phenol redAnalyteSignal processingAnalytical chemistryBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryChemometricschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryBromothymol blueMethyl orangeEnvironmental ChemistryBromocresol purpleSpectroscopySpectroscopyAnalytica Chimica Acta
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Acid excreting mutants of yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

2004

Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants acidifying glucose medium containing bromocresol purple were shown to excrete protons when placed in unbuffered water in the absence of any external carbon source. The mutants belong to 16 different complementation groups. Most of them do not grow on glycerol and the excreted protons are associated to particular sets of organic anions such as citrate, aconitate, succinate, fumarate or malate. These novel types of respiratory mutations seem to be located in genes operating in the Krebs or glyoxylate cycle.

Saccharomyces cerevisiaeMutantCitric Acid CycleBiophysicsGlyoxylate cycleSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundMolecular BiologyWaterCell BiologyHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiology.organism_classificationYeastComplementationCitric acid cyclechemistryBiochemistryMutationbiology.proteinProtonsBromocresol purpleAcidsOxidation-ReductionOrganic anionBiochemical and biophysical research communications
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