About: Titration is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 8923 publications have been published within this topic receiving 155363 citations. The topic is also known as: titrimetry & titrate.
TL;DR: This chapter provides the spectrophotometric, titrimetric, nitrite, and cyanide assay for the differentiation of glutathione S-transferases.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter provides the spectrophotometric, titrimetric, nitrite, and cyanide assay for the differentiation of glutathione S-transferases. Spectrophotometric assays depend upon a direct change in the absorbance of the substrate when it is conjugated with glutathione (GSH). Because each of the reactions is catalyzed at a finite rate in the absence of enzyme, care is needed to reduce nonenzymatic catalysis by minimizing substrate concentrations and by decreasing pH wherever necessary. Titrimetric assay is based on the principle that the conjugation of alkyl halides with GSH can be measured titrimetrically. Although acid production accompanies many of the transferase catalyzed reactions in which thioethers are formed, titrimetry is only used when more convenient assays are not available. Nitrite assay is based on the principle that nitrite is released when GSH reacts with nitroalkanes or with organic nitrate esters. The nitrite can be assayed as the limiting factor in a diazotization reaction with sulfanilamide that produces a readily quantitatable pink dye. Cyanide assay is based on the fact that when glutathione transferases catalyze the attack of the glutathione thiolate ion on the electrophilic sulfur atom of several organic thiocyanates, it results in the formation of an asymmetric glutathionyl disulfide and cyanide. Cyanide can be readily quantitated by a calorimetric method.
TL;DR: Analysis of absorption spectra of a yellow color solution resulting from the reaction of persulfate and iodide in the presence of sodium bicarbonate reveals an absorbance at 352 nm, without significant interferences from the reagent matrix.
TL;DR: The analysis of aqueous H 2 O 2 at concentrations as low as 1 μM is conveniently done by the I 3 - method, which is based on the spectrophotometric determination of I 3, formed when H 2 o 2 is added to a concentrated solution of I -. At 351 nm, E max (I 3 - ) was measured to be 26 450 M -1 cm -1.
Abstract: The analysis of aqueous H 2 O 2 at concentrations as low as 1 μM is conveniently done by the I 3 - method, which is based on the spectrophotometric determination of I 3 - formed when H 2 O 2 is added to a concentrated solution of I - . At 351 nm, E max (I 3 - ) was measured to be 26 450 M -1 cm -1 . By contrast, an apparent value of 25 800 M -1 cm -1 was determined from a calibration of the I 3 - method against titration by permanganate. The difference could only be partially accounted for by the equilibrium between I 3 - , I 2 , and I -
TL;DR: In this paper, a method is proposed to estimate the point of zero charge (pzc) of pure compounds which can be described accurately by the surface ionization model of amphoteric oxides.
Abstract: A method is proposed to estimate the point of zero charge (pzc) of pure compounds which can be described accurately by the surface ionization model of amphoteric oxides. It is demonstrated that under the limiting conditions of “infinite” mass/volume ratio, the pH of the system will approach pH ∞ = 1 2 ( p K 1 + p K 2 ) pzc . Experimental values of the pH of the oxides of titanium, aluminum, a silicon suspended in a closed aqueous system exhibited the existence of a constant pH at high mass fractions. This limiting pH is found to be a reasonable estimate for the point of zero charge of each oxide.
TL;DR: In this paper, the surface groups of active carbons can also be characterized by immersion calorimetry and the variation of the pH of the point of zero charge with the total oxygen content of the surface.