1940
DOI: 10.6028/jres.024.019
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Combination of wool protein with acid and base: hydrochloric acid and potassium hydroxide

Abstract: As an initial part of a general program for the study of the acidic and basic characteristics of textile fibers, a study has been made of the dependence on pH of the amounts of hydrochloric acid and of potassium hydroxide taken up by wool from aqueous solutions. The effect on this dependence of the maintenance of a constant ionic strength by additions of a neutral salt, potassium chloride, has also been determined. Most of the measurements were made at 0° C to minimize the effects of decomposition brought abou… Show more

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Cited by 77 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…At the lower values of pH the curves tend to join each other, as indeed they must if the curve for constant ionic strength be extended to that point at which no salt is present. As in the case of wool [3], the central portion of both the acid and the alkaline regions of the curve for solutions of constant ionic strength is not as steep as the curve for solutions without salt, and a greater amount of acid or base is bound at a given pH. The effect of the presence of salt on the slope and /1 position of the titration curve is greater than could reasonably be accounted for by the influence of the salt on the dissociation constants of the groups which are titrated.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…At the lower values of pH the curves tend to join each other, as indeed they must if the curve for constant ionic strength be extended to that point at which no salt is present. As in the case of wool [3], the central portion of both the acid and the alkaline regions of the curve for solutions of constant ionic strength is not as steep as the curve for solutions without salt, and a greater amount of acid or base is bound at a given pH. The effect of the presence of salt on the slope and /1 position of the titration curve is greater than could reasonably be accounted for by the influence of the salt on the dissociation constants of the groups which are titrated.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…, Figures in brackets indicate the literature references at the end of this paper. 71 and, more recently, by Steinhardt and Harris [3]. The titration of silk fibroin is, in some respects, similar to the titration of wool, but differs in other respects because of decided differences in the number and kinds of constituent amino acid residues.…”
mentioning
confidence: 80%
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