isoelectric point
(noun)
The pH at which a particular molecule or surface carries no net electrical charge
Examples of isoelectric point in the following topics:
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The Effect of pH on Solubility
- The pH at which the net charge is neutral is called the isoelectric point, or pI (sometimes abbreviated to IEP).
- Proteins can therefore be separated according to their isoelectric point.
- In a method called isoelectric focusing, proteins are run through a gel that has a pH gradient.
- For example, a protein that is in a pH region below its isoelectric point will be positively charged and so will migrate towards the cathode (negative charge).
- At this point, it has no net charge, and so it stops moving in the gel.
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α-Amino Acids
- All three compounds are soluble in organic solvents (e.g. ether) and have relatively low melting points.
- These differences all point to internal salt formation by a proton transfer from the acidic carboxyl function to the basic amino group.
- At intermediate pH's the zwitterion concentration increases, and at a characteristic pH, called the isoelectric point (pI), the negatively and positively charged molecular species are present in equal concentration.
- The isoelectric points range from 5.5 to 6.2.
- As defined above, the isoelectric point, pI, is the pH of an aqueous solution of an amino acid (or peptide) at which the molecules on average have no net charge.
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Peptides & Proteins
- As expected, the free amine and carboxylic acid functions on a peptide chain form a zwitterionic structure at their isoelectric pH.
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Boiling Point Elevation
- The boiling point of a solvent is elevated in the presence of solutes.
- This is referred to as boiling point elevation.
- The extent of the boiling point elevation can be calculated.
- In this equation, $\Delta T_b$ is the boiling point elevation, $K_b$ is the boiling point elevation constant, and m is the molality of the solution.
- The boiling point of a pure liquid.
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Freezing Point Depression
- Freezing point depression is the phenomena that describes why adding a solute to a solvent results in the lowering of the freezing point of the solvent.
- The freezing point depression can also be explained in terms of vapor pressure.
- In this equation, $\Delta T_f$ is the freezing point depression, Kf is the freezing point depression constant, and i is the van 't Hoff factor.
- The value of 0.93 oC is the change in the freezing point.
- Discuss the effects of a solute on the freezing point of a solvent
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Boiling & Melting Points
- The melting points of crystalline solids cannot be categorized in as simple a fashion as boiling points.
- Spherically shaped molecules generally have relatively high melting points, which in some cases approach the boiling point.
- The data in the following table serves to illustrate these points.
- Notice that the boiling points of the unbranched alkanes (pentane through decane) increase rather smoothly with molecular weight, but the melting points of the even-carbon chains increase more than those of the odd-carbon chains.
- The last compound, an isomer of octane, is nearly spherical and has an exceptionally high melting point (only 6º below the boiling point).
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Boiling Point and Water Solubility
- It is instructive to compare the boiling points and water solubility of amines with those of corresponding alcohols and ethers.
- Corresponding -N-H---N- hydrogen bonding is weaker, as the lower boiling points of similarly sized amines (light green columns) demonstrate.
- Alkanes provide reference compounds in which hydrogen bonding is not possible, and the increase in boiling point for equivalent 1º-amines is roughly half the increase observed for equivalent alcohols.
- Indeed, 3º-amines have boiling points similar to equivalent sized ethers; and in all but the smallest compounds, corresponding ethers, 3º-amines and alkanes have similar boiling points.
- In the examples shown here, it is further demonstrated that chain branching reduces boiling points by 10 to 15 ºC.
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Physical Properties of Carboxylic Acids
- The table at the beginning of this page gave the melting and boiling points for a homologous group of carboxylic acids having from one to ten carbon atoms.
- The boiling points increased with size in a regular manner, but the melting points did not.
- In the table of fatty acids we see that the presence of a cis-double bond significantly lowers the melting point of a compound.
- The factors that influence the relative boiling points and water solubilities of various types of compounds were discussed earlier.
- Carboxylic acids have exceptionally high boiling points, due in large part to dimeric associations involving two hydrogen bonds.
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Acid-Base Titrations
- Before you begin the titration, you must choose a suitable pH indicator, preferably one that will experience a color change (known as the "end point") close to the reaction's equivalence point; this is the point at which equivalent amounts of the reactants and products have reacted.
- Below are some common equivalence point indicators:
- You can estimate the equivalence point's pH using the following rules:
- You can determine the pH of a weak acid solution being titrated with a strong base solution at various points; these fall into four different categories: (1) initial pH; (2) pH before the equivalence point; (3) pH at the equivalence point; and (4) pH after the equivalence point.
- The end point is reached when the indicator permanently changes color.
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Crystalline Solids
- Most organic compounds have melting points below 200 ºC.
- For a given compound, this temperature represents its melting point (or freezing point), and is a reproducible constant as long as the external pressure does not change.
- If two crystalline compounds (A & B) are thoroughly mixed, the melting point of that mixture is normally depressed and broadened, relative to the characteristic sharp melting point of each pure component.
- The lowest mixture melting point, e, is called the eutectic point.
- The A:B complex has a melting point of 54 ºC, and the phase diagram displays two eutectic points, the first at 50 ºC, the second at 30 ºC.