copper-oxychloride and cupric-chloride

copper-oxychloride has been researched along with cupric-chloride* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for copper-oxychloride and cupric-chloride

ArticleYear
Chronic tribasic copper chloride exposure induces rat liver damage by disrupting the mitophagy and apoptosis pathways.
    Ecotoxicology and environmental safety, 2021, Apr-01, Volume: 212

    Despite the fact that copper (Cu) is a vital micronutrient to maintain body function, high doses of Cu through environmental exposure damage various organs, especially the liver, which is the main metabolic organ. To investigate the influence of long-term Cu-induced toxicity on mitophagy and apoptosis in rat liver, 96 seven-month-old male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed TBCC for 24 weeks. The results revealed that exposure to high Cu concentrations could promote oxidative stress liver injury by increasing the hepatic function index (ALT, AST and ALP) and MDA content, while reducing the activity of antioxidant enzymes (T-SOD, GSH-Px and CAT) related to oxidative stress. Consistent with histopathological observations, proper dietary Cu (15-60 mg/kg) could improve antioxidant stress levels and induce a dose-dependent increase in the mRNA expression of mitophagy-related genes, whereas a high Cu concentration (120 mg/kg) could cause severe liver impairment and ultrastructural changes and a reduction in mitophagosomes, accompanied by downregulation of Atg5, Beclin1, Pink1, Parkin, NIX, P62 and LC3B. The expression of apoptosis-related genes (Bax, Bax/Bcl-2, Caspase3, Cytc and p53) and proteins (Caspase3 and p53) was upregulated with the addition of dietary Cu. The results demonstrated that an appropriate dose of TBCC could improve liver function by promoting mitophagy and Cu enzymes that play antioxidative roles, while the accumulation of excess Cu could induce liver lesions by enhancing apoptosis and inhibiting mitophagy pathways.

    Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Apoptosis; Chlorides; Copper; Copper Sulfate; Diet; Liver; Male; Mitophagy; Oxidative Stress; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Toxicity Tests, Chronic

2021
Raman spectroscopy of selected copper minerals of significance in corrosion.
    Spectrochimica acta. Part A, Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy, 2003, Volume: 59, Issue:6

    The Raman spectroscopy of selected minerals of the corrosion products has been measured including nantokite, eriochalcite, claringbullite, atacamite, paratacamite, clinoatacamite and brochantite and related minerals. The free energy of formation shows that each mineral is stable relative to copper metal. The mineral, which is formed in copper corrosion, depends on the kinetics and conditions of the reaction. Raman spectroscopy clearly identifies each mineral by its characteristic Raman spectrum. The Raman spectrum is related to the mineral structure and bands are assigned to CuCl stretching and bending modes and to SO stretching modes. Clinoatacamite is identified as the polymorph of atacamite and not paratacamite. Paratacamite is a separate mineral with a similar but different structure to that of atacamite.

    Topics: Chlorides; Copper; Corrosion; Kinetics; Minerals; Spectrum Analysis, Raman

2003