scholarly journals On a Colorimetric Method for the Determination of Hydrogen Ion Concentration of the Sea Water by Using PALITZSCH's Buffer Solutions and Phenolphthalein

1934 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
pp. 251-256
Author(s):  
Yoshiyuki MATSUE
1923 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. T. Gimingham

Of the two available methods for the determination of hydrogen-ion concentration, the electrometric is the more fundamental and satisfactory but it requires somewhat elaborate and expensive apparatus. The colorimetric method, on the other hand, though not lacking in difficulties if accurate results are wanted, requires no special apparatus and the actual procedure is simple. It is based on the electrometric method, and involves the use of buffer solutions of known hydrogen-ion concentration determined originally electrometrically.


The urease method for the determination of urea consists essentially of two distinct operations: first, the enzymatic conversion of the urea into its equivalent of ammonium carbonate, and, secondly, the quantitative determination of the latter. Each of these operations may be accomplished in a variety of ways. In the second, for instance, no less than five different analytical procedures have hitherto been made use of. Either the alkaline ammonium carbonate has been titrated directly with acid (1); or its ammonia has been liberated by a stronger base, conducted into an excess of standard acid, and determined by titration (2); or the ammonia has been estimated colorimetrically by Nesslerization (3); or a measured amount of acid has been added to the alkaline reaction product, and the uncombined excess determined iodometrically (4); or, finally, the ammonium carbonate has been estimated by gasometric determination of its carbon dioxide component (5). One other procedure at least is theoretically possible. The transformation of a molecule of neutral urea into a molecule of ammonium carbonate involves a corresponding reduction in hydrogen ion concentration of the medium in which the change takes place. If, therefore, that medium contains an appropriate indicator, it should be possible to deduce from its change of colour the amount or concentration of the urea hydrolysed. Upon this principle we have devised a method which, although hardly a method of precision, has proved itself in certain special circumstances exceedingly useful. Our procedure is in its essential features identical with one already described by Kay (6), but achieves, through certain refinements, a much closer approach to accuracy than Kay was concerned to attain. The first step in the elaboration of the method was to ascertain what effect upon hydrogen ion concentration is produced by the ammonium carbonate derivable from known quantities of urea. Obviously this must depend upon three factors, of which the concentration of the urea itself is only the first. The others are (i) the original p H of the urea-urease mixture, and (ii) the nature and concentration of the buffer salts present. Only when these two conditions are maintained invariable will there be a fixed correspondence between initial concentration of urea and final concentration of hydrogen ions. It is further evident that if the buffer value of the medium chosen be large, the change of p H effected in a given volume by a given addition of ammonium carbonate will be relatively small; and vice versa . With any selected buffer, therefore, the sensitivity of the reaction is controlled by the concentration in which that buffer is present, and may accordingly be varied to suit the nature of the material, the quantities of urea to be dealt with, and other pertinent circumstances. For the purposes we have had in view the most suitable buffer has been a phosphate mixture of M/20 concentration and of initial p H 6·8. The effect upon this mixture of the enzymatic transformation of known quantities or concentrations of urea was determined in the following way:— 1. A series of about thirty Pyrex test-tubes, 1 x 10 cms. in size and of as nearly as possible equal internal diameter, was graduated at 5 c. c.


1937 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Whitaker ◽  
E. W. Lowrance

1. When a Fucus egg develops near one end in a close fitting capillary tube of pyrex glass or silica (quartz), diffusion of substances passing to and from the egg is more impeded on the side of the egg toward the far end of the tube. 2. The egg therefore develops in a gradient of its own diffusion products, and of oxygen tension. 3. More than 600 eggs have been reared, each near one end in a capillary, in sea water at various regulated and measured pH values. 4. When the medium, which is initially homogeneous inside and outside the capillary, is initially at pH 6.5 to 7.6, nearly all of the eggs develop rhizoid protuberances on the sides of the eggs toward the far ends of the capillaries. This is on the sides of the eggs where the concentration of substances diffusing from the eggs is greatest. 5. The polarity and developmental pattern of the egg is thus determined either by a concentration gradient of products diffusing from it, or by a gradient of oxygen tension. The former interpretation is favored. 6. This is regarded as an extension of earlier observations that rhizoid protuberances form on the sides of two neighboring eggs in the direction of the neighbor if the sea water is acidified. 7. It appears hardly possible that a mitogenetic effect could be responsible for the response of an egg to its own diffusion gradients. 8. When the medium is made more basic, the percentage of the eggs which form rhizoid protuberances toward the far end of the tube decreases to about 20 or 25 per cent between pH 8.1 and 8.6. The response of the egg to the gradients which it produces is thus statistically reversed. The determination of the polarity of the eggs by the diffusion gradients does not become as complete in alkalinized as in acidified sea water. 9. When the pH of the sea water is elevated to 9.1 or 9.2, salts precipitate out. The type of development is altered and the control of the diffusion gradients over the polarity of the eggs decreases.


Nature ◽  
1923 ◽  
Vol 111 (2778) ◽  
pp. 132-133
Author(s):  
J. J.

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