Glass Microelectrode Techniques for In Situ pH Measurements

1989 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. L. Conkling ◽  
R. W. Blanchar
2008 ◽  
Vol 59 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Ionut Dron ◽  
Neculai Doru Miron ◽  
Gheorghe Surpateanu

The paper presents the synthesis of cyclo (bis-paraquat p-phenylene p-phenylene-carbonyl) tetrakis (hexafluorophosphate), named �CETOBOX�, and the closely related structural determinations. This compound exists in three tautomeric forms. These forms were evidentiated by NMR-data (1H-NMR, TOCSY, COSY, NOESY), UV-Vis spectra coupled with pH measurements and by synthesis. As the �CETOBOX� gives �in situ� only the corresponding monoylide, the synthesis of a new fluorescent indolizine cyclophane has been performed by a 3+2 cycloaddition. All structures of the new compounds presented herein have been established by NMR spectroscopy. Also, theoretical methods (MM3, AM1, AM1-COSMO and B88LYPDFT) have been used to determine the most stable conformer structures.


1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (104) ◽  
pp. 106-111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard C. Metcalf

AbstractLaboratory pH analyses of glacial melt waters are unrepresentative ofin situvalues, due primarily to CO2gas exchange between the sample and the atmosphere, and solute enrichment from chemical reaction with sediment and colloidal particles. A method is presented which enables field pH measurements that are reproducible within ±0.04 pH units to be made in glacial melt waters, using commonly available digital pH meters with combination electrodes.During initial spring snow melt in May 1981 at Gornergletscher, Switzerland, melt waters in the proglacial stream leaving the glacier terminus were oversaturated with respect to atmosphericp(CO2), and rapidly increased pH during CO2outgassing atin situtemperature and pressure. Summer ice melt from glaciers which are temperate in the ablation zone are usually undersaturated by about ten times with respect to atmosphericp(CO2), and rapidly lower their pH values to achieve equilibrium upon encountering the atmosphere, as observed at Gornergletscher during July and August 1981. Gornergletscher summer proglacial stream waters, sometimes show pH increases from rock weathering, with the rate limited by the transfer rate of CO2across the air-water interface to drive the weathering reactions. Throughout the year, any water parcel at equilibrium with atmospheric CO2is generally at an equilibrium pH value, if filtration prohibits solute enrichment. For these reasons, laboratory pH measurements are unacceptable for quantitative studies of melt-water chemistry and should be discontinued.


1996 ◽  
Vol 462 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Stewart ◽  
Lome D. Murdock ◽  
Nancy Binnie

ABSTRACTIn order to design a scheme to monitor the state of preservation of iron alloys that are found on historic shipwrecks sunk in fresh water, it was first necessary to identify the predominant form of corrosion found on the wrecks. This was done by visual observation, in situ surface pH measurements, and X-ray powder diffraction of the corrosion layers. Once the form of corrosion was identified as pitting corrosion, a monitoring scheme based on photographic recording of the rust-red tubercles was designed. This scheme is simple and nondestructive, both necessary characteristics for the monitoring of submerged historic resources.


1992 ◽  
Vol 263 (1) ◽  
pp. H276-H284 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. S. Blank ◽  
H. S. Silverman ◽  
O. Y. Chung ◽  
B. A. Hogue ◽  
M. D. Stern ◽  
...  

This study examines the use of carboxy-seminaphthorhodafluor-1 (C-SNARF-1) as an indicator of cytosolic pH in isolated rat cardiac myocytes. The emission spectrum of C-SNARF-1 when excited at 530 nm contains two well-separated peaks at approximately 590 and 640 nm, corresponding to the acidic and basic forms of the indicator. This spectral feature allows the indicator to be used in the single excitation, dual emission ratio mode. When C-SNARF-1 is loaded into rat cardiac myocytes as the membrane permeant ester derivative, C-SNARF-1/AM, the indicator localizes within the cytosol with virtually no partitioning into the mitochondria. C-SNARF-1 does not load into isolated mitochondria in suspension. There was no evidence for the presence of non-deesterified C-SNARF-1 within the cells. C-SNARF-1 can be calibrated in situ using a technique that abolishes all transsarcolemmal pH gradients. A 0.7-unit shift in the apparent pK (pKapp = pK-log10) between the in vitro calibration and the in situ calibration is consistent with a change in beta (I640 to pH 9/I640 at pH 5) in the cytosolic environment (beta in situ/beta in vitro = 0.21) and not a change in the true pK of the indicator. The contribution of cellular autofluorescence to the total signal can be made negligible. There is no effect of C-SNARF-1 on the contractile properties of rat cardiac myocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


2000 ◽  
Vol 71 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 103-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda E Hopkins ◽  
Karen S Sell ◽  
Alan L Soli ◽  
Robert H Byrne

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wiley H. Wolfe ◽  
Kenisha M. Shipley ◽  
Philip J. Bresnahan ◽  
Yuichiro Takeshita ◽  
Taylor Wirth ◽  
...  

Abstract. Equimolar tris (2-amino-2-hydroxymethyl-propane-1,3-diol) buffer in artificial seawater is a well characterized and commonly used standard for oceanographic pH measurements. We evaluated the stability of tris pH when stored in flexible, gas impermeable bags across a variety of experimental conditions, including bag type, tris batch, and storage in air vs. seawater over 300 days. Bench-top spectrophotometric pH analysis revealed that the pH of tris stored in bags drifted at a rate of −0.0058 ± 0.0008 yr−1 (mean slope ± 95 % confidence interval of slope). Analyses of total dissolved inorganic carbon confirmed that a combination of CO2 infiltration and/or microbial respiration led to the observed decrease in pH. Eliminating bagged tris pH drift remains a goal, yet the pH drift rate of 0.006 yr−1 is lower than many processes of interest and demonstrates the value of bagged tris to sensor calibration and validation of autonomous in situ pH measurements.


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