Yes you need to know what molarity of the phosphate buffer you need to make and what voluime, then you can use Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. or simply use the phophate buffer calculator http://home.fuse.net/clymer/buffers/phos2.html
during the complexometric titration using edta it is very necessary to maintain the ph of the solution near about 10 so we use ammonium chloride buffer if we will not use this buffer dring the titration ph of sol. will ho lower side
yes??
The molarity of the buffer and the hydrogen concentration of the buffer.
because EBT work best in that pH
Printer buffering, or printer queuing.
its ok to use
We use it for isolation of proteins from yeast cells as a lysis buffer
the common collector can use as voltage buffer
Yes, printers have memory built-in, used to store printing data while the printing is in process. Some printer types must compose the entire page in memory prior to the actual printing, others use the memory to buffer some print. All printers will have such memory, but inexpensive models might be designed with the bare minimum of memory (in order to save cost on the printer).
To maintain constant the pH of a solution.
A user requesting a file to be printed will send the file to a "print spooler," which is a type of buffer that holds print jobs until they are ready to be processed by the printer. From there, the printer will often have a "print buffer" that is fed from the print spooler; as that buffer fills, the printer will begin the process of printing the requested document.
You didn't say which meaning you want to use for this word. A buffer can be a barrier which lessens or absorbs a shock. The airbag acts as a buffer in case of an accident. She was the buffer between them, and kept the argument from getting out of hand. Buffer can also mean a chemical substance which minimizes the acidity of a substance. I need a bottle of buffered aspirin; the buffer keeps it from upsetting your stomach. Buffer can also be a verb meaning to do either of the above. The neutral zone between the two countries buffered their rivalry. That substance buffers the chemicals.
Decide on the concentration of the buffer, use 1L to be simple PH for your buffer should be within one pH unit from the pKa of the acid/conjugate base use Henderson Hasselbalch Equation pH = pKa + log ([Base]/[Acid]) For a 1 M buffer [Acid] + [Base] = 1
Increase the concentration of salt and acid or base. If you are not suppose to increase concentration use more volume of buffer.
Yes you need to know what molarity of the phosphate buffer you need to make and what voluime, then you can use Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. or simply use the phophate buffer calculator http://home.fuse.net/clymer/buffers/phos2.html
I use general everyday printing. It prints everything I want. And many types of printing are there border-less printing etc.