Physical Principles and Techniques of Protein ChemistryPhysical Principles and Techniques of Protein Chemistry Part C ... |
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Page 24
Thus , metal supplied as a wire should be tightly bound ( platinum is usually
employed as a wire of 0 . 002 inch diameter ) . However , metals are often
evaporated by means of resistance heating , from a refractory filament usually
made of ...
Thus , metal supplied as a wire should be tightly bound ( platinum is usually
employed as a wire of 0 . 002 inch diameter ) . However , metals are often
evaporated by means of resistance heating , from a refractory filament usually
made of ...
Page 161
Making up solutions by volume , as described , is usually sufficiently accurate
and volume changes produced upon addition of perturbant are reduced by
adding the perturbant diluted with water . Viscosity - produced errors in pipeting
are also ...
Making up solutions by volume , as described , is usually sufficiently accurate
and volume changes produced upon addition of perturbant are reduced by
adding the perturbant diluted with water . Viscosity - produced errors in pipeting
are also ...
Page 296
Usually the dielectric constant is a scalar quantity but for anisotropic substances ,
it is a tensor quantity . ... Usually , induced dipole moments are due to the
deformation of electron clouds by an external field . Polarizability can be
calculated as ...
Usually the dielectric constant is a scalar quantity but for anisotropic substances ,
it is a tensor quantity . ... Usually , induced dipole moments are due to the
deformation of electron clouds by an external field . Polarizability can be
calculated as ...
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Contents
The Enhancement of Contrast | 21 |
The Preservation of Specimens | 35 |
Examples of the Application of Electron Microscopy to the Study | 48 |
Copyright | |
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absorbance absorption acid appears applied atoms axis binding birefringence boundary buffer calculated cell charge Chem chromophores complex concentration constant containing contrast corrected corresponding curve decrease dependence determined dielectric difference diffusion dipole direction discussed distribution effect electric electric field electron electrophoresis emission energy equation equilibrium example excitation experimental experiments factor fluorescence fraction frequency function given groups Herskovits important increase indicates intensity interactions ionic ions length light limited macromolecules measured method mobility molecular molecules observed obtained occurs optical orientation particles patterns peaks perturbation phase phenolic polarization position possible preparation present produced protein quantum range ratio reaction reference relative relaxation respectively rotation sample separation serum albumin shift shown single solution solvent specimen spectra spectrum strength structure studies technique temperature theory tion transfer transition tryptophan unit usually volume wavelength yield zone