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Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation02:48

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A buffer can prevent a sudden drop or increase in the pH of a solution after the addition of a strong acid or base up to its buffering capacity; however, such addition of a strong acid or base does result in the slight pH change of the solution. The small pH change can be calculated by determining the resulting change in the concentration of buffer components, i.e., a weak acid and its conjugate base or vice versa. The concentrations obtained using these stoichiometric calculations can be used...
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Buffer solutions do not have an unlimited capacity to keep the pH relatively constant . Instead, the ability of a buffer solution to resist changes in pH relies on the presence of appreciable amounts of its conjugate weak acid-base pair. When enough strong acid or base is added to substantially lower the concentration of either member of the buffer pair, the buffering action within the solution is compromised.
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Shape Memory Polymers for Active Cell Culture
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Andrew Hurst Henderson, 1930-2017

Alan G Fraser1, Andrew C Newby2

  • 1Emeritus Professor of Cardiology, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, and Consultant Cardiologist, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK.

European Heart Journal
|August 15, 2019
PubMed
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No abstract available in PubMed .

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