Surface-Active Substances of the Guinea Pig Tubotympanum: A Chemical and Physical Analysis

1981 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-316 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Maves ◽  
Gajanan S. Patil ◽  
David J. Lim

An attempt to describe the nature of the surface-active substances of the eustachian tube lining layer that influence normal tubal function was undertaken. Under sterile conditions, guinea pig tubotympanic washings were collected, centrifuged, and pooled. Analysis of the pooled lavages using standard surface chemistry techniques confirmed the presence of significant surface-tension-lowering activity in the mucous lining layer of the eustachian tube, but the surface pressure obtained is neither as great nor displays the same degree of hysteresis as pulmonary surfactant. Following separation into aqueous and lipid fractions, measurable amounts of surface activity can be found in both isolates. The chemical composition and concentration of the lipid fraction, and its relative contribution to the surface activity of the tubotympanic washings, however, is smaller and radically different from the phospholipids found in surfactant. A significantly higher concentration of protein was recovered in comparison with the lipid portion, and it was observed that the surface activity of the total washings and the aqueous phase bore remarkable similarities. Although the surface-tension-lowering properties of the tubal lining layer may be the consequence of a combined synergistic action of the lipid and protein moieties, we believe that the current evidence points toward the proteins as being the primary tubal surface-tension-lowering substances.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhanar Ospanova ◽  
Nurgeldy Abeu ◽  
Bekzada Tasenova

The aim of this work is to study the surface properties of mixtures of polyacrylamide (PAA) with nonionic surfactants. In this work, kinetic curves of a decrease in the surface tension of PAA were obtained in the concentration range of 1 * 10-5 ÷ 1 * 10-3 base mol/l, and on the basis of the equilibrium values of surface tension, isotherms of the surface tension of aqueous solutions of composite mixtures based on polyacrylamide (PAA) were obtained with surfactants - nonionic amphoteric N, N – dimethyldodecylamine N-oxide (DMDAO) and nonionic cocoamidopropyl betaine (CAPB). It has been shown that compositions of surfactant with a polymer in the region of low concentrations have a lower surface tension, which is associated with an increase in the surface activity of surfactant - PAA composites in comparison with individual surfactants. The surface tension isotherms were used to determine the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the surfactant and surfactant-PAA compositions. It was found that the addition of a polymer to a surfactant lowers the CMC by an order of magnitude for the DMDAO - PAA mixture and by more than two orders of magnitude for the CAPB - PAA mixture, which also indicates an increase in the surface activity of the surfactant - polymer mixtures. The use of PAA compositions with surfactants as stabilizers for foams and emulsions opens up prospects for the development of effective emulsifiers and foaming agents.


The spiracular gill is a pupal structure, but it is the chief respiratory organ of the adult of Taphrophila before the pupal cuticle is shed. At the pupa-adult moult, the epidermis and blood in the spiracular gill are completely isolated from the living insect by two cuticles between which is the moulting fluid. A few hours after the isolation of the tissue, the epidermis of most parts of the gill begins to dissociate, the cells become rounded, separate away from the cuticle and from one another, and in due course form loose clumps usually far from the gill walls. The tissue isolated in the gill repairs cuts and tears in the gill walls with a tanned cuticle. At 16 to 18° C the competence of the isolated tissue to repair damage to the gill walls lasts about 14 days. The tissue is isolated 8 to 9 days before the emergence of the adult, and it repairs the gill up to 5 days after the insect has shed it and flown away. The isolated tissue tolerates complete dehydration and high temperatures. In water the isolated tissue of gills previously dried for 70 days over phosphorus pentoxide and heated when dry to 103° C for 2 h, or to 130° C for 30 min, successfully repaired wounds. The epidermis of the adult and larva of Taphrophila also repairs wounds after complete dehydration. The epidermis of other insects is shown to exhibit a similar tolerance to dehydration even when no such tolerance is shown by the insect: the epidermis of some insects that are killed when they lose about 20% of their moisture content will repair wounds after complete dehydration if dried rapidly. The gill of Taphrophila has a plastron that is not wetted at pressures below about 0⋅3 atm above normal pressure, and it is only wetted by surface active substances that reduce the surface tension to about 25 dyn/cm. Apart from its plastron, the gill is not an effective respiratory organ. The gill walls are not rigid. In water, the internal pressure maintains turgidity and maximum surface area necessary for the efficient functioning of the plastron. The internal pressure of intact and unscarred gills is 4⋅3 atm. When the gill is torn or cut open, blood and cells spurt out and there is an immediate equilization of internal and hydrostatic pressures. A clot is rapidly formed at the site of the injury. The increase in the mechanical strength of the clot outpaces the increase in the internal pressure brought about by water that diffuses into the gill. In a number of other Tipulidae beside Taphrophila blood and epiderm is are isolated in the respiratory horn or the spiracular gill at the pupa-adult moult. In some of these, such as the species of Lipsothrix , the epidermis does not dissociate nor separate from the cuticle but becomes syncytial and remains closely attached to the cuticle.


1926 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Wilhelmj ◽  
Moyer S. Fleisher

1. Following thyroidectomy in guinea pigs, there is a gradual elevation of the surface tension of the blood plasma which reaches its height in from 19 to 22 days after operation. This elevation is probably permanent, since we have found it to persist for as long as 120 days. 2. In our experiments, we found a few thyroidectomized animals in which the surface tension of the plasma was still within normal limits 24 and 120 days after operation. We suggest that these exceptions are due to three possible factors: (1) incomplete thyroidectomy; (2) presence of accessory thyroid tissue; (3) compensatory activity on the part of other organs. 3. The surface tension of the plasma from operated animals is higher than that from controls in both the initial and 20 minute determinations, but the difference is greater at the 20 minute period. 4. The time-drop (difference between the initial and 20 minute determinations) is somewhat greater in the plasma from normal than in that from operated animals. 5. It is suggested that these changes are due to a decrease in the amount of certain normally occurring surface-active substances, the production of which is directly or indirectly dependent upon the thyroid gland.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sampo Vepsäläinen ◽  
Silvia M. Calderón ◽  
Jussi Malila ◽  
Nønne L. Prisle

Abstract. Surface active compounds (surfactants) found in atmospheric aerosols can decrease droplet surface tension as they adsorb to the droplet surfaces simultaneously depleting the droplet bulk. These processes may influence the activation properties of aerosols into cloud droplets and investigation of their role in cloud microphysics has been ongoing for decades. In this study, we have used six different approaches documented in the literature to represent surface activity in Köhler calculations predicting cloud droplet activation properties for particles consisting of one of three different moderately surface active organics mixed with ammonium sulphate in different ratios. We find that the different models predict comparable activation properties at small organic mass fractions in the dry particles for all three moderately surface active organics tested, even with large differences in the predicted degree of bulk-to-surface partitioning of the surface active component. However, differences between the models regarding both the predicted critical diameter and supersaturation for the same dry particle size increase with the organic fraction in the particles. Comparison with available experimental data shows that assuming complete bulk-to-surface partitioning of the organic component (total depletion of the bulk) along the full droplet growth curve does not adequately represent the activation properties of particles with high moderate surfactant mass fractions. Accounting for the surface tension depression mitigates some of the effect. Models that include the possibility for partial bulk-to-surface partitioning yield comparable results to the experimental data, even at high organic mass fractions in the particles. The study highlights the need for using thermodynamically consistent model frameworks to treat surface activity of atmospheric aerosols and for firm experimental validation of model predictions across a wide range of states relevant to the atmosphere.


2018 ◽  
Vol 931 ◽  
pp. 548-551
Author(s):  
Dena K.S. Bataev ◽  
Minkail A. Gaziev ◽  
Adam Kh. Mazhiev ◽  
Aslan Kh. Mazhiev

The article is devoted to the effect of surface-active substances on the interface of phases. The hydrophobization and hydrophilization of surfactants, their role in building composites are considered. The dependence of the surface tension on temperature, the dependence of the density on the temperature of various kinds of additives for concrete, is given.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (21) ◽  
pp. 16387-16411
Author(s):  
Nønne L. Prisle

Abstract. This work presents a thermodynamically consistent framework that enables self-contained, predictive Köhler calculations of droplet growth and activation with considerations of surface adsorption, surface tension reduction, and non-ideal water activity for chemically complex and unresolved surface-active aerosol mixtures. The common presence of surface-active species in atmospheric aerosols is now well-established. However, the impacts of different effects driven by surface activity, in particular bulk–surface partitioning and resulting bulk depletion and/or surface tension reduction, on aerosol hygroscopic growth and cloud droplet activation remain to be generally established. Because specific characterization of key properties, including water activity and surface tension, remains exceedingly challenging for finite-sized activating droplets, a self-contained and thermodynamically consistent model framework is needed to resolve the individual effects of surface activity during droplet growth and activation. Previous frameworks have achieved this for simple aerosol mixtures, comprising at most a few well-defined chemical species. However, atmospheric aerosol mixtures and more realistic laboratory systems are typically chemically more complex and not well-defined (unresolved). Therefore, frameworks which require specific knowledge of the concentrations of all chemical species in the mixture and their composition-dependent interactions cannot be applied. For mixtures which are unresolved or where specific interactions between components are unknown, analytical models based on retrofitting can be applied, or the mixture can be represented by a proxy compound or mixture with well-known properties. However, the surface activity effects evaluated by such models cannot be independently verified. The presented model couples Köhler theory with the Gibbs adsorption and Szyszkowski-type surface tension equations. Contrary to previous thermodynamic frameworks, it is formulated on a mass basis to obtain a quantitative description of composition-dependent properties for chemically unresolved mixtures. Application of the model is illustrated by calculating cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) activity of aerosol particles comprising Nordic aquatic fulvic acid (NAFA), a chemically unresolved and strongly surface-active model atmospheric humic-like substance (HULIS), and NaCl, with dry diameters of 30–230 nm and compositions spanning the full range of relative NAFA and NaCl mixing ratios. For comparison with the model presented, several other predictive Köhler frameworks, with simplified treatments of surface-active NAFA, are also applied. Effects of NAFA surface activity are gauged via a suite of properties evaluated for growing and activating droplets. The presented framework predicts a similar influence of surface activity of the chemically complex NAFA on CCN activation as was previously shown for single, strong surfactants. Comparison to experimental CCN data shows that NAFA bulk–surface partitioning is well-represented by Gibbs adsorption thermodynamics. Contrary to several recent studies, no evidence of significantly reduced droplet surface tension at the point of activation was found. Calculations with the presented thermodynamic model show that throughout droplet growth and activation, the finite amounts of NAFA in microscopic and submicron droplets are strongly depleted from the bulk, due to bulk–surface partitioning, because surface areas for a given bulk volume are very large. As a result, both the effective hygroscopicity and ability of NAFA to reduce droplet surface tension are significantly lower in finite-sized activating droplets than in macroscopic aqueous solutions of the same overall composition. The presented framework enables the influence of surface activity on CCN activation for other chemically complex and unresolved aerosol mixtures, including actual atmospheric samples, to be systematically explored. Thermodynamic input parameters can be independently constrained from measurements, instead of being either approximated by a proxy or determined by retrofitting, potentially confounding several mechanisms influenced by surface activity.


Author(s):  
О. Я. Семешко ◽  
Н. С. Скалозубова ◽  
Т. С. Асаулюк ◽  
Ю. Г. Сарібєкова ◽  
С. А. Мясников

Analysis of the mechanism of action of surfactants in the conditions of washing cotton knitted fabrics, the establishment of surfactants for functional purposes, which should be part of the composition, and the study of changes in the surface tension of solutions of surfactants of various classes designed to create a composition for the preparation of cotton knitted fabrics. Determination of the surface tension of solutions of surfactants of different concentrations was carried out by the method of detachment of the ring, using the Du-Nui method. The paper presents the results of the analysis of the mechanism of action of surfactants in the conditions of washing cotton knitted fabrics, it is established what properties the constituents of the composition should possess and the surfactants that contribute to the maximum reduction in the surface tension of their solutions are determined. Scientifically substantiated the principles of creating surfactants compositions for the scouring of cotton knitted fabric on the basis of an analysis of the mechanism of their action and found that the wetting and washing abilities of surfactants are the determinants; the isothermal dependences of the surface tension of solutions of surfactants of various classes are first obtained. Surface-active substances and their concentrations are established, which ensure low surface tension of solutions.


1967 ◽  
Vol 17 (03/04) ◽  
pp. 495-507 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Gobbi ◽  
U Barbieri ◽  
E Ascari

SummaryCephalin suspensions lose their thromboplastic activity when incubated with Tween or with sodium deoxycholate. This effect is proportional to the concentration of the surface-active substance, and to the length of its incubation with the phospholipids.The disappearance of the thromboplastic activity of cephalin treated with surface-tension lowering substances is due to the increased dispersion of the suspensions, as demonstrated by the decrease of their optical density. The activity of sodium deoxycholate is faster than that of Tween.The impaired thromboplastin formation in the presence of phospholipids treated with Tween or with sodium deoxycholate is not due to the formation of inhibitors.Cephalin incubated with surface-tension lowering substances and recovered by ultracentrifugation does not show any thromboplastic activity.Electron-microscopic studies show that incubation with surface-active substances causes the demolition of the structure of phospholipid-particle, on which the thromboplastic activity seems to depend.The size of the particles and the electric surface-charge seem to be among the main factors responsible for the thromboplastic activity of phospholipids.


Author(s):  
L. S. Khvorova ◽  
N. R. Andreev ◽  
N. D. Lukin

The successful outcome of the existing methods for the crystallization of glucose to greatly depends on the conditions of the stage of nucleation of crystals. The study was conducted with the aim to improve ways of nucleation during the crystallization of glucose. According to the theory of crystallization the rate of nucleation formation in the highest degree depends on the surface tension (ST) of solutions. Theoretical and practical interest is presented the role of ST in the process of crystallization of glucose. Studies have been carried out to determine the surface tension of glucose solutions depending on the concentration of dry substances (DS) and temperature. As a result of research, it has been determined that the ST of glucose solutions increases with an increase in the concentration of DS and a decrease in temperature. When testing aliphatic alcohols as a surface-active substances (surfactants), it was found that ST solutions decrease 2.5 times. The accelerating effect of aliphatic alcohols on the nucleation of crystals was expressed in a decrease in the induction period from 210 minutes to 120 minutes, respectively, in pure solutions and in the presence of surfactants. Tests of various types of seed crystals have revealed that large ( 200 m) and small (60 m) hydrated glucose crystals moistened with alcohol are most effective for crystallizing anhydride glucose under polythermal conditions. The proposed method can significantly save the consumption of glucose for seed, improve the conditions of crystallization and improve the quality of glucose microbial purity.


1967 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 361-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Harper ◽  
D. W. Moore ◽  
J. R. A. Pearson

The boundary conditions at the surface of a small bubble rising in a liquid are examined theoretically, and it is shown by order-of-magnitude arguments, which are confirmed by detailed calculation in a special case, that although surfacetension gradients must always exist around the bubble, they are too small to affect the motion appreciably unless surface-active substances are present. This is because gradients of surface tension imply gradients of temperature in a pure liquid, and these turn out to be always small near the bubble if they tend to zero at large distances from it. The same is true for drops of one fluid in another.


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