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The dielectric method of investigating bound water in biological material: An appraisal of the technique
Author(s) -
Grant E. H.
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
bioelectromagnetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.435
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1521-186X
pISSN - 0197-8462
DOI - 10.1002/bem.2250030106
Subject(s) - dielectric , dispersion (optics) , bound water , anhydrous , volume (thermodynamics) , particle (ecology) , aqueous solution , chemistry , water of crystallization , thermodynamics , properties of water , materials science , molecule , chemical physics , optics , organic chemistry , physics , oceanography , optoelectronics , geology
Three independent dielectric methods for the measurement of water of hydration (bound water) in a biological material are described and discussed comparatively. For well‐defined aqueous solutions of biological molecules, hydration can be obtained from direct observations made on the δ dispersion or from measurement of the dielectric values of the β dispersion. For whole tissue, however, neither of these two methods is applicable, and to deduce the hydration, it is necessary to use the third technique in which the volume of the hydrated biological particle is obtained by measuring the effect of it on the known dielectric properties of pure water. The hydration can then be calculated by deducting the volume of the anhydrous particle from the experimentally determined volume of the hydrated particle. Owing to possible systemmatic errors the uncertainty in the absolute hydration value associated with this technique is rather larger than that obtained with the other two dielectric methods. For studying the differences between hydration in similar tissues, however, this objection disappears.