24 research outputs found
Doctoral Education and Academic Research (in India)
[Excerpt] The state of doctoral education and academic research in India is poor and the country has scant representation among the world’s great universities. The decline has happened in spite of early achievements. Reasons behind this are complex and defy easy explanations. Several probable causes in terms of resources / facilities / opportunities granted to Ph.D. students, faculty quality, financial resources, academic leadership and other issues are explored and some suggestions for improvement are provided
Studies on surfactant-biopolymer interaction. II. Interaction of cetyl trimethyl ammonium-, cetyl ethanolyl dimethyl ammonium-, cetyl diethanolyl methyl ammonium- and cetyl triphenyl phosphonium bromides and cetyl pyridinium chloride with calf thymus DNA
205-215The interaction of the surfactants cetyl trimethyl
arnrnonium-, cetyl ethanolyl dimethyl ammonium-, cetyl diethanolyl methyl
arnmonium-, and cetyl triphenyl phosphonium bromides and cetyl pyridinium
chloride with calf thymus DNA was
studied at 303 K in phosphate buffer (pH
7.0) at 10 <span style="mso-bidi-font-family:Arial;mso-bidi-language:
HI">mM NaCI using
spectrophotometric, viscometric, tensiometric, dynamic light scattering,
circular dichroism, fluorescence microscopic and microcalorimetric techniques.
All the surfactants interacted fairly with DNA, making the biopolymer
condensed, even to the aggregated globular configuration at higher [surfactant]/[DNA]
mole ratio (R), with direct evidence from fluorescence microscopy. Melting
temperature and light
scattering intensity of the DNA increased, whereas
viscosity decreased in the presence of the surfactants. Tensiometry evidenced
effective interaction at [surfactant] as low as 7.6 µM. Isothermal
titration calorimetric measurements supported low enthalpy of binding, induced
aggregation of the surfactants, increased critical micellar concentration and
association of aggregates with the biopolymer at higher R, evidencing
distinctions in thermal behaviour.
</span
Adsorption of methylene blue on cellulose from its own solution and its mixture with methyl orange
611-617The
adsorption behaviour of the cationic
dye, methylene blue (MB) from its own solution and from its mixture with an anionic
dye, methyl orange (MO) on cellulose has been investigated. The effects
of temperature and KCl on the
adsorption process have been examined. The anionic dye, MO neither
individually nor in mixed condition adsorbs on the negatively
charged
cellulose surface under the studied
conditions of temperature and ionic strength. The dye MB alone and from its mixture with MO adsorbs on the
cellulose surface, the former shows lower extent of adsorption than the latter. At
a temperature >303
K, the mixed dyes MB and MO undergo complexation.
The results have been analysed in
the light of the adsorption isotherms of Freundlich, Frumkin and Langmuir
and related adsorption
thermodynamics
Effects of additives (NaCl, urea, glucose, guanidine hydrochloride) on the physico-chemical properties of reverse micelles of Tweens in chloroform
589-597The
physico-chemical properties, viz, critical micelle concentration (CMC) of reverse micelle(s) and
binding of the dye Safranine T (3,7 diamino-2, 8 dimethyl-5-phenyl
phenazinium chloride) with the reverse micelle (RM)
of water/TweenChloroform in the presence of varied concentrations of the additives (sodium chloride, glucose, urea and
guanidine hydrochloride), have
been investigated. While the first reduces the CMC of the studied RM system, the latter three increase
it. The binding efficiency of the dye is likewise affected by the additives. An attempt has
been made to rationalize the results on physico-chemical basis
Characterization of reverse micelles by spectroscopic measurements
1210-1213The w/o microemulsions
formed with the surfactant AOT and different oils have been characterized by absorption,
emission and dynamic light scattering measurements. The threshold [H2O]/[AOT]
ratio (ω) for the zero free water in the microwater pool of the reverse micelles
has been evaluated and
has been
observed to
be oil-dependent. The hydrodynamic diameter of the dispersed water droplets has
been found to be oil -dependent and follows the order: cyclohexan
Salt effects on surfactant aggregation and dye-micelle complexation
137-143Physical parameters for characterizing the structure of micelles are necessary for their surface chemical understanding. The effects of salts on physical characteristics (viz. critical micelle concentration, aggregation behaviour, counter ion binding, dye binding, etc.) of micelles have been investigated. The critical micelle concentration of ionic surfactant (sodium dodecylsulphate) has been found to decrease with addition of salt while for nonionic surfactants (Tweens) the change is insignificant.The aggregation number as well as safranine T and phenosafranine micelle binding constants show increase for ionic micelles in salt environment. The effects of salt in the above regards on nonionic micelles are negligible