Research on determination of surface area of ore body by limiting electric current strength of polarization curve reaction (in Chinese)

Our experiments on the excitatory effect of an electric current have been carried out by examining the relation between the current-duration and its liminal strength. From the determination of the optimal electric stimuli of amphibian muscle and nerve by the condenser method (1) (2), and from the investigations on the relation of the current-duration to the liminal current-strength (3) (4), Keith Lucas confirmed that there should exist three substances, at least, in a normal sartorius muscle of frogs and toads; each substance being distinguished by its own “excitation time,” that is, the substance α represents the muscle material, γ the intramuscular nerve material, and β the intermediary substance; the first showing the longest, the second the intermediate, the third the shortest “excitation time.” His further investigations upon the excitatory process (5) (6), led him to confirm the validity of A. V. Hill’s excitation formula in all respects (7) (8). The essential part of our present paper consists of the discussion upon these works. Part I.—Experiments on a Muscle as a Whole. Apparatus and Method of Experiment . On the whole, we adopted Lucas' method (3) with some modifications in detail.


Chemosensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 72
Author(s):  
Aurelia Magdalena Pisoschi ◽  
Aneta Pop ◽  
Florin Iordache ◽  
Loredana Stanca ◽  
Liviu Bilteanu ◽  
...  

Antioxidants are compounds that prevent or delay the oxidation process, acting at a much smaller concentration, in comparison to that of the preserved substrate. Primary antioxidants act as scavenging or chain breaking antioxidants, delaying initiation or interrupting propagation step. Secondary antioxidants quench singlet oxygen, decompose peroxides in non-radical species, chelate prooxidative metal ions, inhibit oxidative enzymes. Based on antioxidants’ reactivity, four lines of defense have been described: Preventative antioxidants, radical scavengers, repair antioxidants, and antioxidants relying on adaptation mechanisms. Carbon-based electrodes are largely employed in electroanalysis given their special features, that encompass large surface area, high electroconductivity, chemical stability, nanostructuring possibilities, facility of manufacturing at low cost, and easiness of surface modification. Largely employed methods encompass voltammetry, amperometry, biamperometry and potentiometry. Determination of key endogenous and exogenous individual antioxidants, as well as of antioxidant activity and its main contributors relied on unmodified or modified carbon electrodes, whose analytical parameters are detailed. Recent advances based on modifications with carbon-nanotubes or the use of hybrid nanocomposite materials are described. Large effective surface area, increased mass transport, electrocatalytical effects, improved sensitivity, and low detection limits in the nanomolar range were reported, with applications validated in complex media such as foodstuffs and biological samples.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document