Search results for "PRECIPITATION"

showing 10 items of 826 documents

Fractionated precipitation of acid macropolyanions by dialysis, a simple method for the estimation of DNA in complex biological samples.

1976

Abstract After efficient extraction by para-aminosalicylate, (hopping, grinding and eventual sonication, the macropolyanions are transformed into their cetyltrimethylammonium salts. These have differing solubilities, strongly depending on ionic strength. The cationic detergent-macropolyanionic salts are solubilized by high salt concentration. Salt is then dialysed out, rendering the polyanions highly insoluble in a sequential fashion. The insolubilized components are determined quantitatively by monitoring turbidity, which in case of DNA is strictly proportionate to its concentration. This relation is not affected by other components. This makes DNA determination possible even in crude aque…

chemistry.chemical_classificationAnionsChromatographyAqueous solutionPrecipitation (chemistry)TroutSonicationExtraction (chemistry)Osmolar ConcentrationSalt (chemistry)DNASaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySoilActivated sludgechemistryIonic strengthCetrimonium CompoundsMethodsAnimalsChemical PrecipitationTurbidityDialysisZeitschrift fur Naturforschung. Section C, Biosciences
researchProduct

Influence of some physicochemical factors on the viscosity of aqueous levan solutions ofZymomonas mobilis

1998

Zymomonas mobilis strain 113 “S” produces levan – an extracellular, viscous, biologically active, non-toxic fructose polymer with a unique structure and extraordinary properties. This polysaccharide was isolated at two different degrees of purity by alcohol precipitation from aqueous solutions and was characterized with respect to some rheological properties and stability of viscous solutions. The effects of temperature, pH and salt concentration on the viscosity of 1–3% levan solutions were examined. The viscosity of levan solutions was found to be quite stable and reversible at room temperature over a wide range of pH from 4 to 11. The viscosity was slightly affected by increased salt con…

chemistry.chemical_classificationAqueous solutionChromatographybiologyChemistryPrecipitation (chemistry)Salt (chemistry)BioengineeringPolymerbiology.organism_classificationPolysaccharideApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyZymomonas mobilisViscosityRheologyChemical engineeringBiotechnologyActa Biotechnologica
researchProduct

A novel bisphosphonate-based solid phase method for effective removal of chromium(iii) from aqueous solutions and tannery effluents

2013

Effective removal of chromium(III) from waste waters e.g. in the leather industry is required due to continuously tightening environmental regulations, and several methods such as precipitation and adsorption are currently in use. Nevertheless, more efficient, straightforward and inexpensive methods are constantly being sought. The current study describes a novel method to separate chromium(III) from aqueous solutions based on the use of solid bisphosphonates with a P–C–P backbone. Five classes of bisphosphonates with different functional groups and alkyl chain lengths at the center carbon, in all 16 compounds, were prepared and their suitability for metal ion complexing as chelating agents…

chemistry.chemical_classificationAqueous solutionPrecipitation (chemistry)General Chemical EngineeringInorganic chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementGeneral ChemistryChromiumAdsorptionchemistryWastewaterChelationCarbonta116AlkylRsc advances
researchProduct

Biogeochemical Cycle of Silica in an Apolyhaline Interdunal Holocene Lake (Chad, N'Guigmi Region, Niger)

1999

During the Holocene, the apolyhaline conditions in interdunal ephemeral lakes in the Lake Chad region led to various diagenetic processes, which resulted in: (a) clay authigenesis, (b) organic matter lithification (plants and cyanobacterial mats), (c) precipitation of sodium silicate (magadiite, kenyaite, zeolite), and (d) chert neoformation. Each step in this diagenetic process involves silica, which can be highly mobile under such conditions. Therefore, the paleoenvironmental variations can be investigated using the Si cycle.http://link.springer. de/link/service/journals/00114/bibs/9086010/90860475.htm</HEA

chemistry.chemical_classificationBiogeochemical cycleEcologyEphemeral keyGeochemistrySodium silicateGeneral MedicineDiagenesischemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryOrganic matterPrecipitationLithificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoloceneGeologyNaturwissenschaften
researchProduct

The role of hydrology on enhanced weathering for carbon sequestration II. From hydroclimatic scenarios to carbon-sequestration efficiencies

2021

Abstract Enhanced weathering (EW) scenarios are analyzed using the model presented in Cipolla et al. (2020). We explore the role of different hydroclimatic forcing on carbon-sequestration efficiencies. We also investigate whether increasing soil carbon content improves weathering conditions. We link olivine weathering rates to pH variations and quantify the suitability of hydroclimatic regimes to EW, based on rainfall intensity and frequency. The results show that the amount of CO 2 reacting with olivine and ending up in solution in the form of HCO 3 − and CO 3 2 − increases with mean annual precipitation (MAP) up to 2000 mm, but then tapers off for higher MAPs. On the contrary, the sequest…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCarbon Sequestration010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences0208 environmental biotechnologySettore ICAR/02 - Costruzioni Idrauliche E Marittime E IdrologiaWeathering02 engineering and technologySoil carbonCarbon sequestrationAtmospheric sciences01 natural sciences020801 environmental engineeringHydrology (agriculture)NutrientchemistryEnhanced weatheringEnvironmental scienceOrganic matterPrecipitationHydrologyEnhanced Weathering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and Technology
researchProduct

Precipitation chromatography. III. Optimization of the experimental conditions and determination of the polydispersity of fractions

1974

The influence of the solvent–nonsolvent gradient and the temperature gradient on the efficiency of the precipitation chromatography is investigated with radically and anionically prepared polystyrene samples. Only a combination of both gradients gives optimal effectiveness of the column. The separating power of the column was determined by using mixtures of well defined samples. From the elution curves of the mixtures the nonuniformity Ufr of fractions can be estimated. For fractions of anionically prepared polystyrenes Ufr is on the average 0.001; this value is of the same order of magnitude as the statistical error. These results show that with this chromatographic method it is possible t…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyElutionChemistryPrecipitation (chemistry)DispersityGeneral EngineeringAnalytical chemistryPolymerTemperature gradientchemistry.chemical_compoundPolystyreneWell-definedOrder of magnitudeJournal of Polymer Science: Polymer Physics Edition
researchProduct

Phase separation of blends of polydisperse polymers: Comparison between experiment and theory for the system poly(dimethylsiloxane)/poly(ethylmethyls…

1996

Cloud point curves were measured turbidimetrically for blends (upper critical solution temperatures ; UCSTs) of poly(ethylmethylsiloxane) (PEMS) and four different samples of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) ; the weight average molar masses in kg/mol are 31.2 for PEMS and 10.4, 15.5, 18.1 and 24.0 for PDMS ; all components have polydispersity indices D (= M w /M n ) within the range from 1.82 to 2.67. Corresponding calculations on the basis of the Flory-Huggins theory (three adjustable parameters) account for the polydispersity; molecular weight distributions are represented by the generalized Schulz-Flory equation. Calculated cloud point curves agree very well with those measured, if individ…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCloud pointMaterials scienceMolar massPolymers and PlasticsPrecipitation (chemistry)Organic ChemistryDispersityPolymerDegree of polymerizationCondensed Matter PhysicschemistryPolymer chemistryMaterials ChemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryConstant (mathematics)Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics
researchProduct

Assays of Proteasome-Dependent Cleavage Products

2005

The degradation of misfolded, aged, or no longer needed cytosolic proteins depends largely on the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Proteasomes degrade their substrates into fragments of 3-20 amino acids. Human 20S proteasomes can be purified from human erythrocytes by batch adsorption to DEAE-cellulose, ammonium sulfate precipitation, anion-exchange fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC), and glycerol density gradient ultracentrifugation. 20S proteasomes purified by this method are suitable for the in vitro digestion of synthetic peptides as well as full-length proteins. The degradation products produced by proteasomes are separated by reversed-phase HPLC using an acetonitrile gradient. The …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCytosolChromatographychemistryProteasomeEdman degradationFast protein liquid chromatographyDensity gradient ultracentrifugationHigh-performance liquid chromatographyAmmonium sulfate precipitationAmino acid
researchProduct

Cytochemical techniques for zinc and heavy metals localization in nerve cells

2002

Zinc is one of the most abundant oligoelements in the living cell. It appears tightly bound to metallothioneins, loosely bound to some metalloproteins and nucleic acids, or even as free ion. Small amounts of zinc ions (in the nanomolar range) regulate a plentitude of enzymatic proteins, receptors, and transcription factors; thus, cells need accurate homeostasis of zinc ions. Some neurons have developed mechanisms to accumulate zinc in specific membrane compartments ("vesicular zinc") which can be revealed using histochemical techniques. This article is a short report on the different direct-indirect experimental approaches for zinc and heavy metal detection in neurons. Substances giving a b…

chemistry.chemical_classificationHistologyChemistryPrecipitation (chemistry)Metal ions in aqueous solutionchemistry.chemical_elementSalt (chemistry)ZincMetalMedical Laboratory TechnologyMembraneBiochemistryvisual_artNucleic acidMetalloproteinvisual_art.visual_art_mediumAnatomyInstrumentationMicroscopy Research and Technique
researchProduct

Surface and Intercalation Chemistry of Polycarboxylate Copolymers in Cementitious Systems.

2009

International audience; The Ca–Al-layered double hydroxide, the so-called AFm phase, is a product of cement hydration. It is shown that the interaction of this phase with anionic polycarboxylate ether (PCE)-based dispersant polymers is not a simple adsorption but a more complex intercalation phenomenon leading to the transient sequestration of the PCE within the AFm crystallites. As a result, part of the PCE is immobilized, forming a layered organo-mineral composite, and does not play its role of a dispersing agent. This article presents, along general considerations on the links between cement chemistry and rheology, a detailed investigation of the formation, structure, and stability of a …

chemistry.chemical_classificationMaterials scienceCoprecipitationIntercalation (chemistry)Composite number0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyPolymerNeutron scattering021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologychemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionchemistryChemical engineeringPhase (matter)021105 building & constructionMaterials ChemistryCeramics and CompositesComposite material0210 nano-technologyAFm phase
researchProduct