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Quantification of water content in compound

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anilpan...@gmail.com

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Dec 28, 2009, 9:59:45 AM12/28/09
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Hi,

I wanted to quantify the exact amount of water present in my sample.
I am having issues of hydrolysis in my reactions.
I do reactions on peptides.

Any physical means of quantifying the water content would be really
helpful to me.

Any help would be highly appreciated.

Thanks

Anil

Salmon Egg

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Dec 28, 2009, 2:49:12 PM12/28/09
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In article
<346ef092-6ce2-417a...@b2g2000yqi.googlegroups.com>,
"it...@gmail.com" <anilpan...@gmail.com> wrote:

I am not a professional chemist. How about nuclear magnetic resonance?
Maybe microwave spectroscopy. Look for water vibration and rotation
bands.

Bill

--
An old man would be better off never having been born.

Mark Thorson

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Dec 28, 2009, 8:20:06 PM12/28/09
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Winemakers and beekeepers use refractometers for that.

You'd probably have to develop your own calibration
curve, if you could use it at all.

Salmon Egg

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Dec 29, 2009, 12:29:26 AM12/29/09
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In article <4B395946...@sonic.net>,
Mark Thorson <nos...@sonic.net> wrote:

I am no expert on this, but I would expect that merely measuring
refractive index is insufficient for anything but a known binary
mixture. How can you separate out water from sugar from alcohol, from
vinegar, etc etc?

Mark Thorson

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Dec 29, 2009, 12:42:05 AM12/29/09
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He didn't say what his mixture is. Presumably it has
a range of concentrations with regard to water.
If the water concentration is the only variable,
why could that not be correlated to a calibration
curve?

Frank

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Dec 29, 2009, 3:36:22 PM12/29/09
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