Physical Principles and Techniques of Protein Chemistry, Part 2Sydney J. Leach, Sidney J. Leach Physical Principles and Techniques of Protein Chemistry, Part B deals with the theories and application of selected physical methods in protein chemistry evaluation. This book is divided into seven chapters that cover the ultracentrifugal analysis, light scattering, infrared (IR) methods, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and differential thermal analysis of protein properties. This text first describes the fundamental ideas and methodology of sedimentation analysis of ideal noninteracting solutes and the problems of nonideality and solute-solute interaction. This book then deals ... |
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Page 226
... errors inherent in the photometer unit of a typical double - beam , optical - null instrument ( Robinson , 1951 ) . Over the area of the reference beam atten- uator corresponding to 0.1 to 1.0 transmittance , the absolute error is ...
... errors inherent in the photometer unit of a typical double - beam , optical - null instrument ( Robinson , 1951 ) . Over the area of the reference beam atten- uator corresponding to 0.1 to 1.0 transmittance , the absolute error is ...
Page 232
... errors in- volved . The principal source of error arises from the inhomogeneous dis- tribution of the absorbing material in the beam . The magnitude of the error in optical density for a single layer of cylindrical fibers immersed in a ...
... errors in- volved . The principal source of error arises from the inhomogeneous dis- tribution of the absorbing material in the beam . The magnitude of the error in optical density for a single layer of cylindrical fibers immersed in a ...
Page 234
... error . Nothing is gained of course by specifying a maximum tolerable ordinate error which is less than the photometric error inherent in the instrument . In most instances , a noise level corre- sponding to between 0.005 and 0.01 ...
... error . Nothing is gained of course by specifying a maximum tolerable ordinate error which is less than the photometric error inherent in the instrument . In most instances , a noise level corre- sponding to between 0.005 and 0.01 ...
Contents
Ultracentrifugal Analysis | 1 |
J H Coates Glossary of Symbols 23435 37 | 2 |
Fundamentals of the Method | 5 |
Copyright | |
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absorption acid amino anions atoms axial ratio band beam binding Biol bond Bradbury calculated capillary cell centrifugal chain changes Chem chemical shifts complex component concentration constant copper(II denaturation density gradient dependence determined dilution Doty effect electron ellipsoid enzyme equation extrapolation field Fraser frequency fringe Gurd histidine hydrogen ion imidazole imidazole groups instrument interaction intrinsic viscosity Jardetzky length light scattering light-scattering line width lysozyme macromolecule magnetic measured meniscus metal ion method molecular weight molecule myoglobin nuclei observed obtained optical density optical system partial specific volume particle PBLG peak peptide Phys plot Polymer Sci Proc protein solution protons random coil Rayleigh reference refractive index region relaxation residues resonance RNase rotation rotor sample schlieren Section sedimentation coefficient shearing stress slit solvent spectra spectrum speed structure studies Tanford technique temperature Timasheff tion transition ultracentrifuge values velocity Vinograd viscometer zero zone