Resistance of Spirulina platensis to Ammonia at High pH Values

1991 ◽  
Vol 32 (7) ◽  
pp. 953-958 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shimshon Belkin ◽  
Sammy Boussiba
2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 79-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
James W. McKinley ◽  
Rebecca E. Parzen ◽  
Álvaro Mercado Guzmán

Urine-diversion dehydration toilets (UDDT) are common throughout the developing world, and the toilet product is widely used as compost. There is no comprehensive research to date that characterizes the compost to determine its quality, extent of pathogen inactivation, and the effects of climate and bulking materials on the compost. Compost was collected from 45 UDDT in Bolivia and analyzed for physical, chemical, and biological parameters. Eighty percent and 56% of samples did not meet acceptable compost guidelines for moisture content and pH, respectively, indicating desiccation was the dominant process in UDDT. Bulking materials significantly impacted compost characteristics in terms of pH, carbon, carbon-to-nitrogen ratio, and carbon stability (P < 0.05). Composts with ash exhibited, on average, low carbon concentrations (4.9%) and high pH values (9.7), which can be harmful to plants and composting microorganisms. Composts with sawdust exhibited, on average, high carbon concentrations (40.0%) and carbon-to-nitrogen ratios (31.0). Climate had no significant impact on chemical characteristics, however composts from humid regions had significantly higher moisture contents (34.4%) than those from arid climates (24.8%) (P < 0.05). Viable Ascaris lumbricoides ova were identified in 31% of samples, including samples with high pH, low moisture contents, and long storage times.


Clay Minerals ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. A. Faruqi ◽  
Susumu Okuda ◽  
W. O. Williamson

AbstractThe chemisorption of methylene blue by kaolinite crystals increased as the aqueous suspensions changed from acid to alkaline because, at high pH values, not only the basal pinacoids but the edge-faces were negatively charged. The inability to calculate acceptable specific surfaces or cation exchange capacities from the chemisorption data is discussed, with special reference to the orientation of adsorbed dye cations, the covering of more than one exchange site by a monomer or polymer, the different concentrations of exchange sites on the basal pinacoids and edge-faces respectively, the possibility that such sites occur on the tetrahedral rather than on the octahedral basal pinacoid, and the incomplete replacement of inorganic cations.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heikola Tiina ◽  
Vuorinen Ulla

ABSTRACTDegradation of cementitious materials produces leachates of high pH. Such an alkaline plume, if reaching the bentonite buffer, is likely to induce mineralogical and chemical changes in bentonite over long times and may jeopardise the set safety function of the buffer.The objective of this ongoing research is to study the possible alterations of two bentonites, MX-80 and Deponit CA-N, in alkaline leachates at two different temperatures. Also the buffering capacity of the bentonites against high pH will be evaluated.The ongoing batch experiments are carried out in an anaerobic glove-box (Ar atmosphere, low CO2) at two temperatures (25/60 °C) with three types of simulated cement waters (pH 9.7/9,3, 11.3/10.2 and 12.0/10.9) at 25/0 °C) and one saline groundwater simulate (pH 8.3/7.9) as reference. The solid to liquid ratio used is 1/10. For each set of experiments there are three parallels so that bentonite alteration can be analysed after three different time periods. In the experiment each bentonite sample is leached with several batches of leaching solution. For each renewal of the leaching solution the phases are separated by centrifugation, the reacted solution withdrawn and the chemical composition analysed.The high-pH experiments (11.3 and 12.0, at 25°C) have continuously shown an initial decrease in the pH-values after each leachate renewal, albeit less dramatic than in the beginning, indicating remaining buffering capacity of the bentonites. The other two experiments (pH 8.3 and 9.7 at 25°C) have shown rather unaltered pH-values. In general, slightly lower pH-values were observed in the Deponit CA-N samples than in those of MX-80. The main cations (Na and Ca) analysed in the leachates have shown a rather expected trends as a result of ion-exchange occurring in the bentonites. The analysed Si concentrations indicate possible dissolution of smectite. More conclusions are possible after the bentonites have been characterized. One experimental set of the 25 °C experiments has been finished and the bentonite phases are being characterized. Other experiment sets are still continued.


1989 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-39
Author(s):  
A. V. Vasilik ◽  
S. I. Girnyi ◽  
R. K. Melekhov

2016 ◽  
Vol 08 (03) ◽  
pp. 1650039 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Hamzavi ◽  
A. D. Drozdov ◽  
Y. Gu ◽  
E. Birgersson

The equilibrium swelling of a dual stimuli-responsive core/shell hydrogel is studied by a thermodynamic model. This hydrogel shows thermo-sensitivity as well as pH-sensitivity. The model captures the inhomogeneous swelling of core/shell hydrogels and also, accounts for temperature and pH sensitivity. The predictions of this model are verified with the swelling experiments of a core/shell microgel comprising poly N-isopropyl acrylamide (pNIPAM) and acrylic acid (AAc). The model calculates the equilibrium swelling within the ionic core and the neutral shell. Simulation results can reproduce the equilibrium swelling-temperature curves of this microgel at different pH values considering the delay in the volume phase transition temperature (VPTT) of the ionic polymer gel (pNIPAM-co-AAc) in the core. Two transition points are found in the equilibrium swelling behavior of the hydrogel akin to the VPTTs of the core and shell domains at high pH values of bath solutions. Likewise, the degree of ionization in the core domain is predicted to have a two-step transition behavior corresponding to the VPTTs of the core and shell domains at high pH values of bath solutions. It is shown that the equilibrium swelling of the ionic core is mainly influenced by the electrostatic repulsion between bound charges rather than the ionic pressure. Furthermore, it is determined that the maximum radial stress occurs at the core/shell interface and reaches its maximum value about the VPTT of the core.


1978 ◽  
Vol 175 (3) ◽  
pp. 879-885 ◽  
Author(s):  
A D Tsopanakis ◽  
S J Tanner ◽  
R C Bray

Xanthine oxidase is stable and active in aqueous dimethyl sulphoxide solutions of up to at least 57% (w/w). Simple techniques are described for mixing the enzyme in this solvent at–82 degrees C, with its substrate, xanthine. When working at high pH values under such conditions, no reaction occurred, as judged by the absence of e.p.r. signals. On warming to–60 degrees C, for 10 min, however, the Very Rapid molybdenum(V) e.p.r. signal was obtained. This signal did not change on decreasing the pH, while maintaining the sample in liquid nitrate reductase, caused its molybdenum(V) e.p.r. signal to change from the high-pH to the low-pH form. These findings are not compatible with the conclusions of Edmondson, Ballou, Van Heuvelen, Palmer & Massey [J. Biol. Chem. (1973) 248, 6135-6144], that the Very Rapid signal is in prototropic equilibrium with the Rapid signal, and should be important in understanding the mechanism of action of the enzyme. They emphasize the unique nature of the intermediate represented by the Very Rapid e.p.r. signal. The possible value of the pK for loss of an exchangeable proton from the Rapid signal is discussed.


2001 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 353-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thale Kermit ◽  
Yngvar Gauslaa

AbstractThe pH of 192 thin, even-aged twigs from 4 height levels of 12 randomly selected trees within a boreal Picea abies canopy naturally exposed to rainfall with a high pH (>5·2) was measured. The largest variation in bark pH was due to the height above the ground. However, a highly significant horizontal variation between trees was also found, apparently due to small-scale soil variations. The biomass of alectorioid lichens increased with increasing height above die ground to at least 12 m, a height interval with fairly constant pH values. The uppermost twigs had an unusually high pH and an abnormal species composition for P. abies, with dominance of the foliose Melanelia exasperatula. The canopy hosted several cyanobacterial lichens, but these were scattered and had low biomass, restricted to lower branches of the trees with the highest bark pH.


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