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Also nice to see terms like "equimolar" get published.
It is prepared from equimolar quantities of triethylamine and acetic acid.
C-peptide, which is secreted into the bloodstream in equimolar quantities to insulin.
It produces equimolar amounts of phenol and acetone.
The compound is the monohydrate of an equimolar mixture between pemoline and magnesium hydroxide.
Na and Si are equimolar.
This type of diffusion is referred to as equimolar counterdiffusion, and the two species, A and B, are in combination with each other.
"Equimolar Counterdiffusion."
Equimolar Counter-Diffusion.
An equimolar mixture of ZnCl and HCl is the reagent.
The mole fraction, the molar concentration, and the Partial pressure of both gases involved in equimolar counterdiffusion vary linearly.
A case of interest to nuclear fusion is an equimolar mixture of deuterium and tritium ions ().
Co-administration of equimolar doses of betaine may alleviate the hepatotoxic risk associated with niacin therapy.
The reaction catalyzed by the enzyme was found to reach equilibrium at the point when equimolar concentrations of the D- and L-isomers existed.
The major disadvantage of the above technique is that equimolar amounts of each enantiomer are made, but the body only utilizes L-amino acids.
Silibinin itself is mixture of two diastereomers silibinin A and silybinin B in approximately equimolar ratio.
In use, when sodium hydroxymethanesulfinate is made acidic, the reducing sulfoxylate ion and formaldehyde are released in equimolar amounts.
Potassium sorbate is produced by reacting sorbic acid with an equimolar portion of potassium hydroxide.
Its inhibition of bone-resorption is dose-dependent and approximately 1,000 times stronger than the equimolar effect of the first bisphosphonate drug, etidronate.
Related to the Carothers equation are the following equations (for the simplest case of linear polymers formed from two monomers in equimolar quantities):
The simplest case refers to the formation of a strictly linear polymer by the reaction (usually by condensation) of two monomers in equimolar quantities.
In theory, end-products (including ATP) are produced in equimolar quantities from the catabolism of one mole of glucose.
It can be formed by the reaction of a potassium ion (e.g. from potassium hydroxide) with an equimolar amount of phosphorous acid.
However, the term is also applied to an equimolar mixture of those two salts, with whatever water of hydration the sodium carbonate includes, supplied as a powder.
Dicalcium phosphate may be formed by the of stoichiometric quantities (equimolar amounts) of calcium carbonate and phosphoric acid: