Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Micellar techniques, comparison

The purpose of this article is to review studies carried out on hemes incorporated inside the micellar cavity, and examine the effect of micellar interaction on the electronic and structural properties of the heme. A comparison of these results with those on the metalloproteins is clearly in order to assess their suitability as models. The article begins with a general introduction to micellar properties, the incorporation of hemes in the micellar cavity, and then discusses results on hemes inside the micelles with different oxidation and spin states, and stereochemistry. The experimental techniques used in the studies on these aqueous detergent micelles are mostly NMR and optical spectroscopy. The present article has therefore a strong emphasis on NMR spectroscopy, since this technique has been used very extensively and purposefully for studies on hemes inside micellar cavities. [Pg.117]

The separation of phospholipids by micellar electrokinetic capillary electrophoresis (MEKC) has been described (17-19). In this technique, solutes are separated based on their distribution between a mobile (usually aqueous) and a pseudostationary (micellar) phase. Szucs et al. found that the major soybean phospholipids were fully resolved in only 7 minutes using deox ycholic acid for micelle formation in combination with 30% n-propanol at 50°C (18). However, quantification of the separated compounds remains troublesome. This is due first of all to the fact that only UV detection can be used, thus making the response highly dependent on the degree of unsaturation of the phospholipids. Besides, the comparison of peak areas in MEKC is more complicated than in HPLC, because all compounds are moving with different velocities. [Pg.252]

CRM for road dust (BCR-723) containing 81.3 2.5 Jg/kg Pt, 6.1 1.9 ig/ kg Pd, and 12.8 1.3 Jg/kg Rh, was introduced [49, 228]. It is widely used for quality control of results obtained in the analysis of environmental materials (e.g., airborne particulate matters, dusts, soils, and sediments). Comparison of results obtained using different analytical procedures and interlaboratory studies are recommended when there is a lack of suitable CRM (e.g., in examination of clinical samples). The use of standards based on real matrices (e.g., saliva, plasma, ultrafiltrates, and lung fluids) instead of synthetic solutions is recommended in such analyses. Difficulties with the identification and quantification of different metal species in examined samples make the reliability of results of great importance. The use of various instrumental techniques for examination of particular samples can be helpful. The application of chromatography, mass spectrometry, and electrochemistry [199] HPLC ICP MS and HPLC MS/MS [156] ESI MS and MALDI [162] micellar electrokinetic chromatography, NMR, and MS [167] AAS, ESI MS, and CD spectroscopy [179] SEC IC ICP MS and EC ESI MS [180] and NMR and HPLC [229] are examples of such approaches. [Pg.389]

To make the significance of the NMR technique as an experimental tool in surfactant science more apparent, it is important to compare the strengths and the weaknesses of the NMR relaxation technique in relation to other experimental techniques. In comparison with other experimental techniques to study, for example, microemulsion droplet size, the NMR relaxation technique has two major advantages, both of which are associated with the fact that it is reorientational motions that are measured. One is that the relaxation rate, i.e., R2, is sensitive to small variations in micellar size. For example, in the case of a sphere, the rotational correlation time is proportional to the cube of the radius. This can be compared with the translational self-diffusion coefficient, which varies linearly with the radius. The second, and perhaps the most important, advantage is the fact that the rotational diffusion of particles in solution is essentially independent of interparticle interactions (electrostatic and hydrodynamic). This is in contrast to most other techniques available to study surfactant systems or colloidal systems in general, such as viscosity, collective and self-diffusion, and scattered light intensity. A weakness of the NMR relaxation approach to aggregate size determinations, compared with form factor determinations, would be the difficulties in absolute calibration, since the transformation from information on dynamics to information on structure must be performed by means of a motional model. [Pg.339]

The evaluation of solute-micelle binding constants has important implications outside the field of chromatography, such as micellar catalysis, tertiary oil recovery, and enzyme and membrane modeling. MLC is a powerful technique for the determination of these constants, in comparison to classical methods. The use of MLC in this field has several advantages ... [Pg.142]

Determination of Theophylline in Human Serum by HPLC using Zwitterionic Micellar Mobile Phase. Comparison with an Enzyme-Multiplied Immunoassay Technique, Analyst, 118 1511 (1993). [Pg.425]

Comparison with Phase-Transfer, Micellar and Other Biphasic Techniques... [Pg.174]

The possession of a cmc may be viewed as a criterion of micellar association. However, as discussed by Mukerjee (5), it is all too easy to imagine inflection points in experimental curves and it is preferable to examine the system using a variety of techniques and to compare cmc values. Table 1 shows such a comparison for antihistamine drugs containing a diphenylmethane hydrophobic group and shows reasonable agreement between values. [Pg.203]

Abstract This chapter discusses the potential of fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (PCS) to study polymer systems. It introduces the technique and its variations, describes analysis methods, points out advantages and limitations, and summarizes PCS studies of molecular and macromolecular probes in polymer solutions, polymer gels, polymer nanoparticles, and polymeric micellar systems. In addition, a comparison with other experimental methods is presented and the potential of a combination with simulations discussed. [Pg.256]


See other pages where Micellar techniques, comparison is mentioned: [Pg.207]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.529]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.403]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.592]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.322]   


SEARCH



Comparison techniques

Micellar techniques

© 2024 chempedia.info