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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(27): 18930-18942, 2024 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38952212

ABSTRACT

Single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of needle shaped riboflavin (RF) crystals revealed π-stacking of RF's isoalloxazine units (distance: 3.643-3.313 Å) with syn-orientated ribityl chains. In line with this, classical molecular dynamics (MD) (400 ns) using an isobaric-isothermal (NPT) ensemble of eight RF in a water box (〈V〉 ∼ 508.62 nm3, 〈p〉 = 1.11 bar) revealed anti-aligned aggregation of RF in water (COM-distance: 4 Å). Comparing umbrella sampling for the separation of two RF molecules to the separation of two lumichrome molecules, the similar mean potential force for the separation of RF and lumichrome (22.8 kJ mol-1; 24.4 kJ mol-1) proved dispersive interactions as the origin of RF's aggregation. Though stacking of RF is the major water-solubility limiting factor, the conformation of RF's ribityl chain may alter the solubility in water. Both, MD (in water) and COSMO-RS (in water continuum) predicted that conformations of RF with an extended ribityl chain are thermodynamically preferred over any conformations with internal hydrogen bonds between hydroxyl groups and nitrogen/oxygen atoms of the pyrimidine moiety of the flavin ring. Interestingly, COSMO-RS predicted the solubility of the extended conformation to be significantly lower than the latter leading to the very low average solubility of RF. Nuclear Overhauser effect measurements (NOESY) of the structurally related sodium riboflavin 5'-monophosphate (RF-PO4) in deuterium oxide confirmed π-stacking of the isoalloxazine rings. In conformity with the 350 times higher water-solubility of RF-PO4, NOESY also indicated a contorted conformation of the ribityl phosphate chain, whereas, for RF, indications for a contorted chain were not observed.

2.
Molecules ; 29(2)2024 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38257207

ABSTRACT

Natural aromas like cinnamaldehyde are suitable solvents to extract curcuminoids, the active ingredients found in the rhizomes of Curcuma longa L. In a pursuit to find other nature-based solvents, capable of solving curcumin, forty fragrances and flavours were investigated in terms of their solubilisation power. Aroma compounds were selected according to their molecular structure and functional groups. Their capabilities of solving curcumin were examined by UV-Vis spectroscopy and COSMO-RS calculations. The trends of these calculations were in accordance with the experimental solubilisation trend of the solubility screening and a list with the respective curcumin concentrations is given; σ-profiles and Gibbs free energy were considered to further investigate the solubilisation process of curcumin, which was found to be based on hydrogen bonding. High curcumin solubility was achieved in the presence of solvent (mixtures) with high hydrogen-bond-acceptor and low hydrogen-bond-donor abilities, like γ- and δ-lactones. The special case of DMSO was also examined, as the highest curcumin solubility was observed with it. Possible specific interactions of selected aroma compounds (citral and δ-hexalactone) with curcumin were investigated via 1H NMR and NOESY experiments. The tested flavours and fragrances were evaluated regarding their potential as green alternative solvents.

3.
Molecules ; 29(6)2024 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38542954

ABSTRACT

Coffee silverskin is a byproduct of the coffee industry, appearing in large quantities during the roasting step. In this work, a sober and simple water process is proposed, using extractions cycles, to produce valuable products including (a) an extract rich in caffeine, (b) possibly pure caffeine, and (c) insoluble fibers. The hypothetical number of necessary cycles was calculated and compared to the number of cycles used experimentally. Two types of cycles, with and without water compensation, were compared for their water consumption and the amount of caffeine extracted. The use of cycles, with the resulting product from a previous extraction as a solvent for fresh biomass, drove a significant rise in the content of caffeine determined by a UV-visible detector with a spectrophotometer and ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC). After 11 extraction cycles with water compensation, we obtained an extract 4.5 times more concentrated in caffeine (4.25 mg/mL) than after a single extraction (1.03 mg/mL).

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(30): 20728-20736, 2023 Aug 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37490278

ABSTRACT

A significant synergistic effect is observed when solubilizing curcumin or tetrahydrocurcumin in binary mixtures of ethanol and triacetin. The present work deals with a detailed investigation of the solvent system by means of COSMO-RS-based calculations, dynamic light scattering, small-and-wide-angle X-ray scattering, and dielectric relaxation spectroscopy. Theoretical calculations lead to the conclusion that the enhanced solubility is not primarily the result of an interaction optimum between individual surface charge densities. Scattering experiments also exclude the formation of mesoscopic structures as the main reason. However, dielectric relaxation spectra suggest that in the concentration range of 0.3 ≤ x(triacetin) ≤ 0.6, ethanol molecules are released from their living polymer ethanol network and can interact with triacetin on a molecular level. The mesoscopic aggregation, thus, decreases. The concentration range of the ethanol-triacetin complexes has a significant overlap with the range of maximum solubility of (tetrahydro)curcumin. Nevertheless, despite detailed investigations, the exact origin of the solubilization power of the solvent remains speculative.

5.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(17): e202218775, 2023 Apr 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36735337

ABSTRACT

The amino alcohol meglumine solubilizes organic compounds in water and enforces the formation of electron donor acceptor (EDA) complexes of haloarenes with indoles, anilines, anisoles or thiols, which are not observed in organic solvents. UV-A photoinduced electron transfer within the EDA complexes induces the mesolytic cleavage of the halide ion and radical recombination of the arenes leading, after rearomatization and proton loss to C-C or C-S coupling products. Depending on the substitution pattern selective and unique cross-couplings are observed. UV and NMR measurements reveal the importance of the assembly for the photoinduced reaction. Enforced EDA aggregate formation in water allows new activation modes for organic photochemical synthesis.

6.
Langmuir ; 38(34): 10392-10399, 2022 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35976253

ABSTRACT

Chemical gardens are self-assembled structures with intricate plant-like morphologies and consist of mineralized membranes, which form spontaneously at interfaces between compartments with dissimilar chemical composition, most typically acidic metal salt and alkaline sodium silicate solutions. While this phenomenon is thought to occur in a number of practical settings, it has also proven to be valuable for investigating transport characteristics in distinct applied systems. For example, coupled diffusion and precipitation processes were monitored in silica gardens based on calcium and iron salts, considered to be models for cement hydration and steel corrosion, respectively. Here we extend these studies to the case of aluminum-based silica gardens, one of the so far less frequently investigated examples of silica gardens. To this end, single macroscopic tubes were prepared in a reproducible way by the controlled addition of sodium silicate solution to a pellet of pressed aluminum nitrate. Continued sampling of the volumes enclosed by and surrounding the formed membraneous structure allowed the time-dependent development of ion concentration gradients to be tracked over extended periods of time, while both the pH and electrochemical potential differences across the membrane were recorded online by immersed probes. The dynamic behavior revealed in this way was finally complemented by ex-situ analyses of the composition of the formed tubes. The collected data shows that the as-prepared tubular structures consist of sodium aluminosilicate phases with certain similarities to zeolites and geopolymers. The emerging tube wall was further found to be permeable to all ionic species present in the system, allowing significant electrochemical potential to be sustained over tens of hours until diffusion had eventually diminished the initially generated gradients. The findings of this work may have important implications for the geochemical fate of natural aluminosilicate sources, the use of such geopolymers in construction applications, and the synthesis and properties of zeolites.

7.
Chemistry ; 27(65): 16135-16144, 2021 Nov 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34590745

ABSTRACT

Chemical gardens are self-assembled tubular precipitates formed by a combination of osmosis, buoyancy, and chemical reaction, and thought to be capable of catalyzing prebiotic condensation reactions. In many cases, the tube wall is a bilayer structure with the properties of a diaphragm and/or a membrane. The interest in silica gardens as microreactors for materials science has increased over the past decade because of their ability to create long-lasting electrochemical potential. In this study, we have grown single macroscopic tubes based on calcium carbonate and monitored their time-dependent behavior by in situ measurements of pH, ionic concentrations inside and outside the tubular membranes, and electrochemical potential differences. Furthermore, we have characterized the composition and structure of the tubular membranes by using ex situ X-ray diffraction, infrared and Raman spectroscopy, as well as scanning electron microscopy. Based on the collected data, we propose a physicochemical mechanism for the formation and ripening of these peculiar CaCO3 structures and compare the results to those of other chemical garden systems. We find that the wall of the macroscopic calcium carbonate tubes is a bilayer of texturally distinct but compositionally similar calcite showing high crystallinity. The resulting high density of the material prevents macroscopic calcium carbonate gardens from developing significant electrochemical potential differences. In the light of these observations, possible implications in materials science and prebiotic (geo)chemistry are discussed.


Subject(s)
Calcium Carbonate , Minerals , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Spectrum Analysis, Raman , X-Ray Diffraction
8.
Chemistry ; 27(51): 13052-13058, 2021 Sep 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34196061

ABSTRACT

We introduce a simple way to liquify rare earth metals (REM) by incorporating the corresponding cations, in particular Eu3+ , La3+ , and Y3+ , into polyvalent ionic liquids (ILs). In contrast to conventional methods, this is achieved not by transforming them into anionic complexes, but by keeping them as bare cations and combining them with convenient, cheap and commercially available anions (A) in the form [REM3+ ][A- ]3 . To do so, we follow the COncept of Melting Point Lowering due to EThoxylation (COMPLET) with alkyl polyethylene oxide carboxylates as anions. We provide basic properties, such as glass transition temperatures, viscosities, electrical conductivities, as well as water-octanol partition constants P and show that these ILs have remarkably different properties, despite the similarity of their cations. In addition, we show that the ionic liquids possess interesting luminescent properties as non-conventional fluorophores.

9.
Langmuir ; 37(13): 3817-3827, 2021 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33724851

ABSTRACT

Even in the absence of surfactants, polymers, or particles, spontaneous emulsions produced by dilution with water can be stable over days. This "Ouzo effect" used by the industry is obtained by rapid dilution from an identified "pre-Ouzo" domain of composition where weak aggregates are present: nanometer-sized clusters covered by a surface layer enriched in a hydrotrope such as ethanol. In these systems, Ostwald ripening is not an effective destabilizing mechanism. Using in situ autodilution small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), we follow the morphological transitions occurring in a ternary mixture of water/n-octanol/ethanol throughout the monophasic and biphasic regions. This allows for the first time an online characterization of the multiscale coexisting microstructures. Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) profiles on metastable emulsions as well as phase-separated samples complete the SAXS data, taking advantage of contrast variation via isotopic substitution. After crossing the phase boundary into the two-phase region, coexisting phases are both ternary solutions structured at the nanometer scale when the emulsion is stable. The transition from single phase to two phases is asymmetric around the plait point. When the initial concentration of the hydrotrope is below the minimum hydrotrope concentration (MHC), emulsification failure occurs, i.e., emulsions cream within seconds. Beyond MHC, the low interfacial tension between coexisting ternary fluids results in a Laplace pressure below 100 Pa, explaining the puzzling resilience of spontaneous emulsion to the universal mechanism of Ostwald ripening.

10.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(2): 1381-1391, 2021 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33393569

ABSTRACT

Amphiphilic molecules (e.g. hydrotropes) that enhance the solubility of hydrophobic compounds in water are often charged. As a result, such compounds also show specific ion effects. These effects can either strengthen or weaken the solubilisation power of amphiphilic molecules, depending on their degree of ion hydration. They can even prevail and transform an apparent solubilizer into an "anti-hydrotrope", i.e. a salting-out agent. In the present paper, we discuss this subtle balance between specific (Hofmeister) effects exerted by ionic headgroups and the hydrophobicity of the residual compound structure, including the size of the molecule and the presence of electron-withdrawing groups.

11.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(14): 8261-8272, 2021 Apr 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33527947

ABSTRACT

We use the model system ethanol-dodecane to demonstrate that giant critical fluctuations induced by easily accessible weak centrifugal fields as low as 2000g can be observed above the miscibility gap of a binary liquid mixture. Moreover, several degrees above the phase transition, i.e. in the one-phase region, strong gradients of ethanol concentration occur upon centrifugation. In this case, the standard interpretation of sedimentation equilibrium in the analytical ultracentrifuge (AUC) yields an apparent molar mass of ethanol three orders of magnitude higher than the real value. Notably, these composition gradients have no influence on the distribution gradient of solutes such as dyes like Nile red. The thick opaque interphase formed upon centrifugation does not appear as the commonly observed sharp meniscus, but as a turbidity zone, similar to critical opalescence. This layer is a few millimeters thick and separates two fluids with low compositional gradients. All these effects can be qualitatively understood and explained using the Flory-Huggins solution model coupled to classical density functional theory (DFT). In this domain hetero-phase fluctuations can be triggered by gravity even far from the critical point. Taking into account Jean Perrin's approach to external fields in colloids, a self-consistent definition of the Flory effective volume and an explicit calculation of the total free energy per unit volume is possible.

12.
Molecules ; 26(13)2021 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34279374

ABSTRACT

Most of the commonly used Ionic Liquids (ILs) contain bulky organic cations with suitable anions. With our COMPLET (Concept of Melting Point Lowering due to Ethoxylation), we follow a different approach. We use simple, low-toxic, cheap, and commercially available anions of the type Cx(EO)yCH2COO- to liquefy presumably any simple metal ion, independently of its charge. In the simplest case, the cation can be sodium or lithium, but synthesis of Ionic Liquids is also possible with cations of higher valences such as transition or rare earth metals. Anions with longer alkyl chains are surface active and form surface active ionic liquids (SAILs), which combine properties of ionic and nonionic surfactants at room temperature. They show significant structuring even in their pure state, i.e., in the absence of water or any other added solvent. This approach offers new application domains that go far beyond the common real or hypothetical use of classical Ionic Liquids. Possible applications include the separation of rare earth metals, the use as interesting media for metal catalysis, or the synthesis of completely new materials (for example, in analogy to metal organic frameworks).

13.
Molecules ; 26(24)2021 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34946787

ABSTRACT

A water-free, ternary solvent mixture consisting of a natural deep eutectic solvent (NADES), ethanol, and triacetin was investigated concerning its ability to dissolve and extract curcumin from Curcuma longa L. To this purpose, 11 NADES based on choline chloride, acetylcholine, and proline were screened using UV-vis measurements. A ternary phase diagram with a particularly promising NADES, based on choline chloride and levulinic acid was recorded and the solubility domains of the monophasic region were examined and correlated with the system's structuring via light scattering experiments. At the optimum composition, close to the critical point, the solubility of curcumin could be enhanced by a factor of >1.5 with respect to acetone. In extraction experiments, conducted at the points of highest solubility and evaluated via HPLC, a total yield of ~84% curcuminoids per rhizome could be reached. Through multiple extraction cycles, reusing the extraction solvent, an enrichment of curcuminoids could be achieved while altering the solution. When counteracting the solvent change, even higher concentrated extracts can be obtained.


Subject(s)
Curcuma/chemistry , Curcumin/chemistry , Curcumin/isolation & purification , Ethanol/chemistry , Triacetin/chemistry , Acetylcholine/chemistry , Choline/chemistry , Proline/chemistry , Solubility
14.
Anal Chem ; 91(20): 13080-13087, 2019 10 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31524378

ABSTRACT

Luminol is a major probe for chemiluminescence (CL) and electrochemiluminescence (ECL) detection technologies in (bio)analysis. Surfactants are added to ECL assay cocktails to enhance signals or are present, owing to given bioassay protocols, yet little is known regarding their effects on luminol ECL. In-depth understanding is provided here through a broad study with bioanalytically relevant surfactants (cationic, anionic, and nonionic), four common electrode materials, and two luminol derivatives. Naturally, in ECL, surface effects are dominant; however, bulk solution, diffusion, and luminescence-stabilization processes also contribute significantly to the overall reaction. It was found that in contrast to CL the effect surfactants have on luminol ECL cannot be linked to general surfactant characteristics such as ionic nature, hydrophilic lipophilic balance (HLB) value, and critical micellar concentration (CMC). Instead, surfactants act in an all-encompassing mechanism, including surface electrochemistry, their solution and interfacial phases, and the chemical luminescence pathway. This leads to dramatic differences in signals obtained, ranging from 5-fold increases to total quenching. Within this complexity, we defined six guiding principles that are extrapolated from the underlying mechanisms and selection guides for surfactant, electrode, and environmental condition combinations. Those will now assist in developing highly sensitive luminol-ECL-based bioassays, because the surfactant selection can be based not only on properties needed for the assay protocol but also on identifying the optimal electrode-surfactant pair to maximize detection efficiency.


Subject(s)
Luminol/chemistry , Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Adsorption , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Electrochemical Techniques/methods , Electrodes , Luminescence , Luminescent Measurements/methods
15.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 21(15): 8054-8066, 2019 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30932113

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we consider the influence of H-bond donor and acceptor functionalities on the formation of mesoscale inhomogeneities in ternary systems. It was found that hydrogen-bonding re-enforces such structures, but is not necessarily a prerequisite for the occurrence of mesoscale, microemulsion-like structuring in ternary surfactant-free microemulsions (SFME) and consequently, hydrogen-bonding-free microemulsions (HBFME) exist. The evaluated ternary systems were investigated by means of dynamic light scattering (DLS) and computer-based calculation methods. Theoretical COSMO-RS based calculations were applied to provide an explanation for different hydrotropic efficiencies, and COSMOplex calculations were used to predict and evaluate the propensity of the molecules to form mesoscale structures in SFME and HBFME. Microemulsion-like fluctuations could be observed in the COSMOplex simulations and correlate fairly well with the appearance of mesoscopic structures observed in SFME and HBFME, although the free energy differences in the formation of aggregate structures in the investigated systems are very small, in the range of 0.05 kcal mol-1.

16.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(16): 4260-5, 2016 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27044068

ABSTRACT

Ternary solutions containing one hydrotrope (such as ethanol) and two immiscible fluids, both being soluble in the hydrotrope at any proportion, show unexpected solubilization power and allow strange but yet unexplained membrane enzyme activity. We study the system ethanol-water-octanol as a simple model of such kinds of ternary solutions. The stability of "detergentless" micelles or microemulsions in such mixtures was proposed in the pioneering works of Barden and coworkers [Smith GD, Donelan CE, Barden RE (1977)J Colloid Interface Sci60(3):488-496 and Keiser BA, Varie D, Barden RE, Holt SL (1979)J Phys Chem83(10):1276-1281] in the 1970s and then, neglected, because no general explanation for the observations was available. Recent direct microstructural evidence by light, X-ray, and neutron scattering using contrast variation reopened the debate. We propose here a general principle for solubilization without conventional surfactants: the balance between hydration force and entropy. This balance explains the stability of microemulsions in homogeneous ternary mixtures based on cosolvents.

17.
Chemphyschem ; 18(4): 338-345, 2017 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28001337

ABSTRACT

Silica gardens are extraordinary plant-like structures resulting from the complex interplay of relatively simple inorganic components. Recent work has highlighted that macroscopic self-assembly is accompanied by the spontaneous formation of considerable chemical gradients, which induce a cascade of coupled dissolution, diffusion, and precipitation processes occurring over timescales as long as several days. In the present study, this dynamic behavior was investigated for silica gardens based on iron and cobalt chloride by means of two synchrotron-based techniques, which allow the determination of concentration profiles and time-resolved monitoring of diffraction patterns, thus giving direct insight into the progress of dissolution and crystallization phenomena in the system. On the basis of the collected data, a kinetic model is proposed to describe the relevant reactions on a fundamental physicochemical level. The results show that the choice of the metal cations (as well as their counterions) is crucial for the development of silica gardens in both the short and long term (i.e. during tube formation and upon subsequent slow equilibration), and provide important clues for understanding the properties of related structures in geochemical and industrial environments.

18.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(37): 25463-25470, 2017 Sep 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28900640

ABSTRACT

The initial definition of hydrotropy by Neuberg in 1916 describes a hydrotrope as a molecule which enhances the solubilization of hydrophobic substances in water. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and sodium xylene sulfonate (SXS) are typical representatives fulfilling this old definition. They are either surfactants with a critical micellar concentration (CMC) or hydrotropes in the current sense of the term, showing a minimum hydrotrope concentration (MHC), respectively. In the present contribution, we consider the antagonistic salt PPh4Cl as a hydrotrope. Surface tension measurements and solubilization experiments on a hydrophobic dye confirm the solubilization behavior of PPh4Cl, which is in-between the one of SDS and SXS. With the help of scattering techniques (DLS, SLS, SAXS), NMR and conductivity measurements, we show that in contrast to SDS as a hydrotrope with an inherent CMC, PPh4Cl does not exhibit mesoscale aggregation. Therefore, PPh4Cl can be classified rather as a hydrotrope in the modern sense, with an inherent MHC just as SXS.

19.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(35): 23773-23780, 2017 Sep 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28665425

ABSTRACT

In this contribution, we (i) link the mesoscopic structuring of the binary structured solvent mixture H2O/tert-butanol (TBA) to the kinetics and the efficacy of the oxidation of benzyl alcohol (BA) to the corresponding aldehyde catalyzed by H5PMo10V2O40. We also compare the catalytic efficacy of this reaction in the mesoscopically structured solvent H2O/TBA to an unstructured (or very weakly structured) solvent H2O/ethanol (EtOH). In this context, we (ii) also give a methodological outline on how to study systematically the catalytic efficacy of chemical reactions as a function of the mesoscale structuring of a binary solvent. We demonstrate that the obtained yields of benzyl aldehyde depend on the type of mesoscopic structuring of the binary solvent H2O/TBA. An elevated catalytic performance of at least 100% is found for unstructured binary mixtures H2O/TBA compared to compartmented binary mixtures H2O/TBA. We conclude that compartmentation of both the organic substrate and the catalyst in TBA and water-rich micro phases seems to be unfavorable for the catalytic efficacy.

20.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(3): 1806-1816, 2017 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27929158

ABSTRACT

In the present contribution, the pre-structuring of binary mixtures of hydrotropes and H2O is linked to the solubilisation of poorly water miscible compounds. We have chosen a series of short-chain alcohols as hydrotropes and benzyl alcohol, limonene and a hydrophobic azo-dye (Disperse Red 13) as organic compounds to be dissolved. A very weak pre-structuring is found for ethanol/H2O and 2-propanol/H2O mixtures. Pre-structuring is most developed for binary 1-propanol/H2O and tert-butanol/H2O mixtures and supports the bicontinuity model of alcohol-rich and water-rich domains as already postulated by Anisimov et al. Such a pre-structuring leads to a high solubilisation power for poorly water miscible components (limonene and Disperse Red, characterized by high octanol/water partition coefficients, log(P) values of 4.5 and 4.85), whereas a very weak pre-structuring leads to a high solubilisation power for slightly water miscible components (benzyl alcohol). This difference in solubilisation power can be linked to (i) the formation of mesoscale structures in the cases of ethanol and 2-propanol and (ii) the extension of pre-structures in the cases of 1-propanol and tert-butanol. Three different solubilisation mechanisms could be identified: bulk solubilisation, interface solubilisation and a combination of both. These supramolecular structures in binary and ternary systems were investigated by small-and-wide-angle X-ray and neutron scattering, dynamic light scattering and conductivity measurements (in the presence of small amounts of salt).

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