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01 - INSTRUMENTATION wavelength

● Sample compartment - holds transparent tube or


cell containing sample
pH METER
● Detector - measure amount of light transmitted
● Measures H+ ion concentration and pH of an ● Read out device - displays the reading
unknown solution Tungsten Lamp - light source in the visible region
● Designates the intensity or degree of acidity Deuterium Lamp - light source in the ultraviolet region
● pH formula Source > entrance slit > dispersing device > exit slit > cuvette
● Equipped with: glass electrode, reference electrode (sample holder) > detector (as shown in the diagram in the
○ Modern pH meters has temperature probes discussion)
which allows temperature corrections
TRANSMITTANCE
Glass Electrode - thin, pH sensitive glass membrane ● Amount of monochromatic light absorbed by a
Reference Electrode - salt bridge with saturated KCl solutions sample is determined by comparing the intensities of
● Most common: Calomel Electrode incident light (Io) and the transmitted light (I)
● Also the ratio of the intensity of the transmitted light
SPECTROPHOTOMETRY
to the incident light
● Method to measure how much the chemical ● Transmittance formula
substance absorbs light by measuring the intensity of
ABSORBANCE
light as a beam of light passes through sample
solutions ● Amount of light absorbed by a sample
● Basic principle: “Each compound absorbs or ● Absorbance formula
transmits lights over a certain range of wavelength.”
● One of the most useful quantitative analysis BEER-LAMBERT’S LAW
● Uses spectrophotometers
● Determination of the concentration of the absorbing
ULTRAVIOLET-VISIBLE SPECTROPHOTOMETER (UV-VIS) species in the analyte solution
● States that: “The intensity of the transmitted light
● Makes the sample absorb light in the visible and near decreases exponentially as anyone of these factors
UV region of the electromagnetic spectrum increase.”
● Beer-Lambert’s Law formula
COLORIMETRIC ASSAYS
● According to this law, absorbance is directly related
● Measures the amount of light transmitted through a to the concentration if the measurements are made
sample at a given wavelength at a fixed wavelength in a cell of constant path which
is usually 1 cm
WAVELENGTH OF LIGHT SOURCE
Molar extinction coefficient - measure of how strongly a
UV-VIS SPECTROPHOTOMETER solution absorbs light in a particular wavelength
Ultraviolet Range - 185-400 nm ● For two solutions of the same compounds,
Visible Range - 400-700 nm one with a known concentration (standard
solution) and the other with an unknown
INFRARED SPECTROPHOTOMETER concentration, the concentration of the
Infrared Range - 700-15,000 nm unknown solution can be calculated from
the measured absorbance of the unknown
UV-VIS ESSENTIAL PARTS solution and the absorbance of the
standard solution.
● White light source ● Insert formulas here
● Monochromator - disperse light into its components’
GENESYS 5 SPECTROPHOTOMETER 02 - pH MEASUREMENT
● Offers 5 nm spectral slit width and has a wavelength AND BUFFER PREPARATION
range of 200-1100 nm
● Has a split beam optical system ● pH
○ Negative log of the [H+]
MULTISKAN GO MICROPLATE SPECTROPHOTOMETER
○ For determination of acidity and alkalinity
● Used to measure UV/VIS absorbance from 200 to ○ pH formula
1000 nm on 96 to/or 384 - well microplates ● pOH
● Incubate up to 45 ℃ and shake the microplate ○ Negative log of [OH-]
○ pOH formula
Microplate - hindi ko nakopya
FORMULA CHEAT SHEET
IMPORTANT POINTS TO CONSIDER IN UV/VIS ANALYSIS
● Insert formulas here
1. Errors, due to inadequate or missing reagents,
POTENTIOMETER AND COLORIMETRIC pH DETERMINATION
solutions should be well mixed prior to absorbance
reading Potentiometric pH Determination
2. Enough time should be given for the complete color ● Involves the use of a pH meter
development of the solution ● Measures the voltage between two electrodes and
3. Assays should be performed in duplicate or triplicate display the results
4. D q nakopya
5. D q nakopya 1 Colorimetric pH Determination
6. Beer-Lambert’s Law is accurate = absorbance of ● Use of indicator dyes which produce color depending
0.05-0.70 on the sample
> 0.70 - underestimates real absorbance
<0.05 - not accurate COLORIMETRIC INDICATORS
7. Calibration curve should never be extrapolated
beyond the highest absorbance value measured. INDICATOR ACID BASE pH RANGE
Sample solution should be diluted so that its
absorbance falls within the calibration curve. Thymol blue (1st) R Y 1.2 - 2.8

APPLICATIONS OF THE UV-VIS SPECTROPHOTOMETER Thymol blue (2nd) Y B 8.0 - 9.6


● Reaction Kinetics Bromophenol blue Y V 3.0 - 4.6
● Quantitation
● pKa Determination Bromocresol green Y B 3.8 - 5.4
● DNA Structural Information
Bromocresol purple Y P 5.2 - 6.8
CENTRIFUGATION
Methyl orange O Y 3.2 - 4.4
● Process used to separate or concentrate materials
suspended in a liquid medium using the effect of Methyl red R Y 4.2 - 6.3
gravity on the particles in suspension
Centrifugal Force - fictitious force, peculiar to a particle Chlorophenol blue Y B 4.8 - 6.4
moving on a circular path
Centrifuge - device used in centrifugation …….. according to Bromothymol blue Y B 6.0 - 7.6
size, shape, density/viscosity of the medium and the rotor
speed Cresol red Y R 7.2 - 8.8
Phenol red Y R 6.8 - 8.4 ● Can be either polar, nonpolar, acid, or base

Phenolphthalein CLESS R 8.4 - 10.0 Glucogenic acid - glucose/sugar


Ketogenic acid - ketone

DENATURATION
BUFFERS AND THEIR IMPORTANCE
● Process of changing or deviating from the native
BUFFER SOLUTION conformation

● Contain either a weak acid or weak base and its salt.


Both of these must be present. They can resist
changes in pH when small amounts of either acid or
base are added.
● Must contain relatively large concentration of acid to
react with any hydroxide ions that may be added /
Must contain relatively large concentration of base
to react with any hydrogen ions that may be added
● The buffer components must not consume each
other in neutralization reactions. The remedies by
using an acid-base conjugate pair.
Example:
CH₃COOH / CH₃COONa Buffer
Adding acid, the reaction would be:
CH₃COO⁻ + H⁺ ↔ CH₃COOH
Adding a base would result:
CH₃COOH + OH⁻ ↔ CH₃COO⁻ + H₂O

HENDERSON-HASSELBALCH EQUATION

● Used to estimate the pH of a solution


● H-H Equation formula

BUFFER CAPACITY

● The number of moles of an acid or base necessary to


change the pH of a buffer by 1

03 - ISOLATION AND
CHARACTERIZATION OF PROTEINS

PROTEINS

● Constitute 90% of the organic matter of cell


● Polymers of amino acids linked by a peptide bond

AMINO ACIDS

● Building blocks of proteins


● Contains carboxyl acid and amino functional groups

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