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Electric field mechanism, potential

The experimental data and arguments by Trassatti [25] show that at the PZC, the water dipole contribution to the potential drop across the interface is relatively small, varying from about 0 V for An to about 0.2 V for In and Cd. For transition metals, values as high as 0.4 V are suggested. The basic idea of water clusters on the electrode surface dissociating as the electric field is increased has also been supported by in situ Fourier transfomr infrared (FTIR) studies [26], and this model also underlies more recent statistical mechanical studies [27]. [Pg.594]

The measurement of mass using a quartz crystal microbalance is based on the piezoelectric effect.When a piezoelectric material, such as a quartz crystal, experiences a mechanical stress, it generates an electrical potential whose magnitude is proportional to the applied stress. Gonversely, when an alternating electrical field is... [Pg.263]

Besides its temperature dependence, hopping transport is also characterized by an electric field-dependent mobility. This dependence becomes measurable at high field (namely, for a field in excess of ca. 10d V/cm). Such a behavior was first reported in 1970 in polyvinylcarbazole (PVK) [48. The phenomenon was explained through a Poole-ITenkel mechanism [49], in which the Coulomb potential near a charged localized level is modified by the applied field in such a way that the tunnel transfer rale between sites increases. The general dependence of the mobility is then given by Eq. (14.69)... [Pg.568]

In the interdisciplinary field of biophysics and biotechnology, the bioeffects of electric field have received considerable interest for both fundamental studies on these interaction mechanisms and potential application. However, the effects of pulsed electric field (PEF) on secondary metabolism in plant cell cultures and fermentation processes have been unknown. Therefore, it would be very interesting to find out whether PEF could be used as a new tool for stimulating secondary metabolism in plant cell cultures for potential application to the value-added plant-specific secondary metabolite production. Furthermore, if the PEF permeabilization and elicitation are discovered in a cell culture system, the combination of... [Pg.91]

Quantum mechanical calculations are appropriate for the electrons in a metal, and, for the electrolyte, modern statistical mechanical theories may be used instead of the traditional Gouy-Chapman plus orienting dipoles description. The potential and electric field at any point in the interface can then be calculated, and all measurable electrical properties can be evaluated for comparison with experiment. [Pg.90]

Electric field sensitive dyes respond to changes in electrical membrane potential by a variety of different mechanisms with widely varying response times depending on their chemical structure and their interaction with the membrane. An understanding of the mechanisms of dye response and their response mechanisms is important for an appropriate choice of a probe for a particular application. The purpose of this chapter is, therefore, to provide an overview of the dyes presently available, how they respond to voltage changes, and give some examples of how they have been applied. Finally, because there is still scope for the development of new dyes with improved properties, some directions for future research will be discussed. [Pg.332]

Slow dyes that respond via a redistribution across the entire membrane (sometimes called Nemstain dyes) do so because of a change in the transmembrane electrical potential. As such, they can only be used as probes of the transmembrane potential and not as probes of the surface potential or the dipole potential. Dyes whose electric field sensing mechanism involves a movement between the aqueous medium and its adjacent membrane interface on one side of the membrane can, in principle, respond to changes in both the transmembrane electrical potential and the surface potential. Fast dyes that remain totally in the membrane phase (e.g., styrylpyridinium, annellated hemicyanine, and 3-hydroxyflavone dyes) respond to their local electric field strength, whatever its origin. Therefore, these dyes can, in principle, be used as probes of the transmembrane electrical potential, the surface potential, or the dipole potential. [Pg.341]


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