You certainly can use heat to kill microorganisms in a "protein-rich" solution if you don't care whether the proteins get denatured or not.
It is not mandatory to heat this solution.
I would take 351 g of CdI2 and heat it in hot water, have a soluable solution at that temperature, then decrease the temperature to have a supersaturated solution
- 37.1 kj/mol is the heat of solution for lithium chloride.
usually it attracts more bacteria instead of killing them.Bacteria fin places that ange from 31 to 39 degrees celcius the best.An example would be the human body at 37 degrees celcius.the colder it get the less bacteria.Double doses dude!
exothermic solution is the solution which liberates energy in the form of heat.
what is the promble for heat, cold microorganisms
heat
It is in their genetic makeup. Often the more complex microorganisms will be more heat resistant compared to the lower forms.
It is not mandatory to heat this solution.
A Bunsen Burner
I would take 351 g of CdI2 and heat it in hot water, have a soluable solution at that temperature, then decrease the temperature to have a supersaturated solution
Effect of heat would be the solvent will be dissolved fast and the temperature changes contribute to the change of the effect of the supersaturated solution.
I would consider revising your question.
The heat of solution for CaCl2 is -176,2 cal/g.
Moist heat coagulates microbial proteins (including protein enzymes), inactivating them irreversibly.
nothing it would stay alive
- 37.1 kj/mol is the heat of solution for lithium chloride.