1951
DOI: 10.1021/ie50501a040
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Viscosity of Glycerol and Its Aqueous Solutions

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Cited by 717 publications
(489 citation statements)
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“…But this effect diminishes at very high HBD compositions. Comparing these readings to the viscosity of pure glycerol at different temperatures [20], indicates similar trend of variation. Adding more glycerol to the DESs produces a composite viscosity closer to pure glycerol, whereas adding more salt in the mixture increases the viscosity considerably.…”
Section: B Viscositymentioning
confidence: 52%
“…But this effect diminishes at very high HBD compositions. Comparing these readings to the viscosity of pure glycerol at different temperatures [20], indicates similar trend of variation. Adding more glycerol to the DESs produces a composite viscosity closer to pure glycerol, whereas adding more salt in the mixture increases the viscosity considerably.…”
Section: B Viscositymentioning
confidence: 52%
“…Experiments with the RR peptide with 0.0 M NaCl were repeated in the presence of 15% glycerol, which translates into a 1.45-fold increase in solution viscosity, (58). If binding rates are limited by diffusion in solution, then k on should be inversely proportional to (6), although in practice, the slope of a k on /k on 0 versus 0 / plot can diverge somewhat from the theoretical value of 1 (59).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…124 mPas. Thereby, only slight changes are measured in the density (ρ = 1 to 1.22 g/cm³) and the surface tension (γ = 72.1 to 64.4 mN/m) [24]. The influence of the conductivity of the fluids on the electrical field of the SAW can be neglected in a first approximation due to the high dielectricity (ε r ≈ 20 -40) of glycerol at MHz frequencies and moderate temperatures [25].…”
Section: Wavefield and Diffractionmentioning
confidence: 99%