نتایج جستجو برای: hydrogen ion

تعداد نتایج: 340529  

The structure of the nonaaquayttrium (III) bromate, [Y(H2O)9](BrO3)3, at low temperature (100 K) has been studied by means of single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Crystallography shows a hexagonal unit cell, space group P63/mmc (No. 194) with Z = 2, a = b = 11.7104(11) Å, c = 6.6259(5) Å and V = 786.90(12) Å3 at 100 K. The hydra...

2016
Tarkeshwar C. Patil Siddhartha P. Duttagupta

The impact of oxygen ion transport at the electrolyte–electrode interface of a micro-solid oxide fuel cell using different fuels is investigated. Model validation is performed to verify the results versus the reported values. Furthermore, as the hydrogen-to-carbon ratio decreases, the diffusivity of the oxygen ion increases. This increase in diffusivity is observed because the number of hydroge...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 1938
William H. Kelley

In the presence of animal fluids or their protein constituents, Type I Pneumococcus survived and multiplied at acid hydrogen ion concentrations which in the plain broth were bactericidal for these organisms. Minimal numbers of these cells readily produced pneumococcus growth in serum broth when adjusted at hydrogen ion concentration as great as pH 5.5 with hydrochloric, or to pH 6.5 with acetic...

Journal: :The journal of physical chemistry. A 2007
Dorothy J Miller James M Lisy

To properly understand the preferred structures and biological properties of proteins, it is important to understand how they are influenced by their immediate environment. Competitive intrapeptide, peptide...water, ion...water, and ion...peptide interactions, such as hydrogen bonding, play a key role in determining the structures, properties, and functionality of proteins. The primary types of...

2009
W. Oohara O. Fukumasa

In a plasma source development of a hydrogen pair-ion plasma consisting of only hydrogen atomic ions, H and H−, efficient production of the atomic ions is required. Hydrogen positive ions produced in a PIG discharge are supplied to a catalyst. The ions are converted to the atomic ions on the catalyst surface, and an ionic plasma with very low electron density is generated.

2003
M. CHESNEY

The latent period of growth or "lag," first recognized by Mfiller in 1895,1 is the time interval between the inoculation of a medium and the beginning of growth at the max imum rate. Chesney concluded that the latent period in the growth of bacteria is an expression of injury which the bacterial cell has sustained from its previous environment3 This conclusion was based upon the observations th...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 2003
O. T. Avery Glenn E. Cullen

1. The optimum hydrogen ion concentration for growth of pneumococcus is pH 7.8. 2. In broth cultures growth of pneumococcus continues until a final hydrogen ion concentration of about pH 5.0 is reached, if sufficient fermentable carbohydrate' (above 0.4 per cent) is present. Apparently this acidity is sufficient in itself to stop growth. 3. If less carbohydrate is present in the medium growth c...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1973
R Cleland

Avena coleoptiles excrete hydrogen ions in response to the hormone auxin. Both auxin-induced cell elongation and hydrogen ion excretion occur after only a short lag, and both are prevented by either carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone or cycloheximide. These results support the idea that hydrogen ions act as a second messenger in auxin-induced cell elongation and can be the wall-loosening ...

Journal: :The Journal of General Physiology 2003
Edwin B. Powers

1. The ability of marine fishes to absorb oxygen at low tension from the sea water is more or less dependent upon the hydrogen ion concentration of the water. 2. The ability of fishes to withstand wide variations in the range of hydrogen ion concentration of the sea water can be correlated with their habitats. The fishes that are most resistant to a wide variation in the hydrogen ion concentrat...

Journal: :The Journal of General Physiology 1973
Ann M. Woodhull

Increasing the hydrogen ion concentration of the bathing medium reversibly depresses the sodium permeability of voltage-clamped frog nerves. The depression depends on membrane voltage: changing from pH 7 to pH 5 causes a 60% reduction in sodium permeability at +20 mV, but only a 20% reduction at +180 mV. This voltage-dependent block of sodium channels by hydrogen ions is explained by assuming t...

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