Search results for "dilution"
showing 10 items of 242 documents
Analysis of archaeological pottery by X-ray fluorescence spectrometry applying the limit dilution method
1994
A method for correcting the intensity of x-ray fluorescence (limit dilution method) is proposed for the analysis of samples with a complex matrix such as ceramic materials of archaeological interest. This method corrects the interelement effects, resolving the wide deviations which occur in the quantitative results obtained by x-ray fluorescence without correction. The contents of sodium, magnesium, aluminium, silicon, potassium, calcium, titanium and iron in sixteen archaeological ceramic samples of different origins and from different locations were determined. The results obtained are comparable to the values obtained by chemical analysis. A statistical study of the data was carried out …
Physico-Chemical Stability of Admixtures of Vinflunine Used in Clinical Practice.
2021
Procedure of administration of vinflunine is complex and consists of an Y-site injection with fluid at different speeds. Dose is diluted with 100 mL of 0.9% sodium chloride or 5% glucose and infused with half of the 500 mL bag of the fluid over 20 min; after that, the remaining fluid is administered at 300 mL/h. In this study, chemical stability and physical compatibility of vinflunine diluted with in 500 mL of both fluids were evaluated to simplify the administration procedure (infusion of mixture on 20 min followed by 250 mL of fluid at 300 mL/h). Physical compatibility and chemical stability were evaluated at two temperatures and protected from and exposed to light. Physical compatibilit…
Development of an Isotope Dilution Mass Spectrometric Method for Dimethylthallium Speciation and First Evidence of Its Existence in the Ocean
1999
A sensitive analytical method for the determination of dimethyl thallium (Me2Tl+) in environmental samples by positive thermal ionization isotope dilution mass spectrometry (PTI-IDMS) was developed...
Quantitative analysis of chromite ores using glass discs in moderate dilutions of lithium tetraborate by x-ray fluorescence spectrometry
2006
A method for the quantitative analysis of chromite ores by x-ray fluorescence spectrometry using beads is proposed. The work concerned the serious problems caused by the refractory nature of these materials which prevents the use of glass discs in x-ray fluorescence. An in-depth study was done to optimise the variables which influence the glass disc formation process. Sufficiently homogeneous glass discs were obtained under the following experimental conditions: lithium tetraborate as flux with moderate sample dilution (1:40), with the addition of one or two drops of LiBr solution(250 g l−1), at a temperature of 1200 °C for 30 min. The qualitative and semiquantitative results for the chromi…
On the ambiguous consequences of omitting variables
2015
This paper studies what happens when we move from a short regression to a long regression (or vice versa), when the long regression is shorter than the data-generation process. In the special case where the long regression equals the data-generation process, the least-squares estimators have smaller bias (in fact zero bias) but larger variances in the long regression than in the short regression. But if the long regression is also misspecified, the bias may not be smaller. We provide bias and mean squared error comparisons and study the dependence of the differences on the misspecification parameter.
Protonation constants and association of polycarboxylic ligands with the major components of seawater
2000
Apparent protonation constants, log βjH*, of 11 carboxylic acids were determined potentiometrically ([H+]-glass electrode) in artificial seawater containing six of the major components (Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Cl-, and SO42-) at different salinities: S (‰) = 5, 15, 25, 35, 45. Values of log βjH* were fitted by the simple polynomial equation log βjH* = log TβjH + a1S1/2 + a2S + a3S3/2 (log TβjH = protonation constants at infinite dilution; a1, a2, a3 = empirical parameters), for mono-, di-, and tricarboxylates. For carboxylic anions with charge < −3, a better fit was obtained using the equation log βjH* = log TβjH + b1I + b0z* log(1 + b2I) (b0, b1, b2 = empirical parameters, z* = square sum of…
Quantitation of antigen-reactive T cells in peripheral blood by IFNgamma-ELISPOT assay and chromium-release assay: a four-centre comparative trial
2000
The ELISPOT assay is increasingly being used for the monitoring of the induction of antigen-reactive T cells in cancer vaccination trials. In order to evaluate the reliability of T cell frequency analysis with the ELISPOT assay, a comparative study was performed in four European laboratories. Six samples from healthy subjects were analyzed for the frequency of influenza-reactive CD8+ T cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) by IFNgamma-ELISPOT assay. In addition, one laboratory determined cytotoxic T cell precursor (CTL) frequencies in these samples by limiting dilution chromium-release assay (LDA), and three laboratories performed a variant of the LDA, the multiple microculture…
Direct measurements of electron thermalization in Coulomb blockade nanothermometers at millikelvin temperatures
1998
Abstract We investigate electron thermalization of tunnel junction arrays installed in a powerful dilution refrigerator whose mixing chamber can produce lattice temperatures down to 3 mK. The on-chip Coulomb blockade thermometers (CBT) against other thermometers at the mixing chamber provide direct information on the thermal equilibrium between the electronic system and the refrigerator. We can detect and discriminate between the heat load delivered through the wiring and that produced by the bias current of the CBT-measurement. The basic heat leak limits the minimum of the electronic temperature to slightly below 20 mK.
Micellar liquid chromatography in doping control.
2010
The issue of doping control in sport involves the development of reliable analytical procedures and efficient strategies to process a large number of samples in a short period of time. Reversed-phase LC techniques with aqueous–organic mobile phases and MS or diode-array detection yield satisfactory results for the identification of prohibited substances in sport. However, time-consuming sample pretreatment steps are required, which reduces sample throughput. Micellar LC (MLC) that uses hybrid mobile phases of surfactant above its critical micellar concentration and organic solvent has been revealed as an interesting alternative. The surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate solubilizes the protein…