potassium-bromide has been researched along with potassium-nitrate* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for potassium-bromide and potassium-nitrate
Article | Year |
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The effect of ionic strength on the UV-vis spectrum of congo red in aqueous solution.
The major peak near 498 nm in the ultraviolet-visible spectrum of congo red in aqueous solution shifts toward the blue while the molar absorptivity of this peak decreases predictably with increasing ionic strength. The shift was observed for solutions in which ionic strength was varied from 0.0 to 1.8M using the uni-univalent ionic compounds, NaCl, NaClO(4), KNO(3) and KBr separately. A plot of the log of the absorbance at the peak versus ionic strength was linear as well as a plot of the log of the wavelength of the major peak (shifted from 498 nm) versus the ionic strength. The slopes of each of these plots were somewhat different depending on the ionic compound. Topics: Bromides; Coloring Agents; Congo Red; Nitrates; Osmolar Concentration; Perchlorates; Potassium Compounds; Sodium Chloride; Sodium Compounds; Solutions; Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet; Water | 2006 |
Prolonged exposure to a K-rich medium makes the rat mast cell membrane permeable to external calcium ions.
Rat mast cells, pretreated with a Ca-free, high KCl medium for more than 30 min, released histamine when subsequently exposed to a medium containing 0.1-2 mM Ca, despite the absence of voltage-dependent Ca channels. Morphological studies showed that high KCl-treated cells became swollen and that the addition of Ca caused degranulation (exocytosis). Ca-stimulated histamine release was inhibited when the high KCl treatment medium contained dinitrophenol and 2-deoxyglucose. The response to Ca was also observed when KCl in the treatment medium was replaced by RbCl, CsCl, KBr or KNO3. When the high K-treated cells were incubated with 0.5 mM 45Ca at 0-1 degree C, 45Ca uptake by these cells was much larger than that by untreated cells, suggesting that the membrane permeability to Ca of these cells is increased. Although prolonged (90 min) incubation of the cells with an isotonic KCl medium increased the rate of leakage of lactate dehydrogenase possibly reflecting extensive cell swelling, most cells recovered the ability of responding to stimulation with compound 48/80 or with simultaneous removal of Na and Ca when subsequently incubated with a Na-based medium containing Ca. Raising the KCl concentration above normal osmolarity in the treatment medium reduced the extents of cell swelling, without reducing the response to Ca addition. Under various other experimental conditions, a poor correlation was also found between the extents of swelling and the magnitude of the response to Ca. These results raised the possibility that intracellular accumulation of a particular species of anions increased membrane permeability to Ca. Topics: Animals; Anions; Bromides; Calcium; Calcium Radioisotopes; Cations, Divalent; Cell Membrane; Cell Membrane Permeability; Cesium; Chlorides; Female; Histamine Release; L-Lactate Dehydrogenase; Male; Mast Cells; Microscopy, Electron; Nitrates; Osmolar Concentration; Potassium; Potassium Chloride; Potassium Compounds; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains; Rubidium | 1989 |