• Title/Summary/Keyword: Water-soluble ions

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Solids Loss with Water Uptake during Soaking of Soybeans (대두의 침지과정중 침출액의 성분변화)

  • Lee, Yung-Heon;Jung, Hae-Ok;Rhee, Chong-Ouk
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.19 no.6
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    • pp.492-498
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    • 1987
  • Dried soybeans (varieties: Saeal, Kwanggyo, Tanyob) took up water rapidly for first 3hr followed by a slower rate of uptake. The beans took up an equal weight of water (100% hydration)after approximately 3.5hr at $50^{\circ}C$, 5hr at $30^{\circ}C$ and 7.5hr at $20^{\circ}C$ respectively. pH of the soaking solutions decreased during the soaking period. This was undoubtedly caused by the ionization of the cellular components resulting in increased levels of hydrogen ions in the liquor. Soluble solids were leached out of the beans at fairly steady rate throughout the hydration and the amount was greater with higher temperature. This amounted to 0.4-0.7g at $20^{\circ}C$ and 10.2-15.0g at $50^{\circ}C$ per 100g soybeans. Temperature was the most important factor in determining the rate of water absorption and of solid losses. Of the total solids lost, 12-25% was protein. The proportion of protein loss increased as the soaking time and temperature increase. Amount of protein loss was 80-200mg at $20^{\circ}C$ and 440-480mg at $50^{\circ}C$ after 24hr soaking per 100g soybeans. About 5% of soluble sugars, including fructose, sucrose, raffinose, and stachyose, was removed from the beans after 24hr soaking at $20^{\circ}C$.

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Source Apportionment and the Origin of Asian Dust Observed in Korea by Receptor Modelling (CMB) (수용모델(CMB)을 이용한 한반도에서 관측된 황사의 발원지 추정과 기여도에 대한 연구)

  • Shin S.A.;Han J.S.;Kim S.D.
    • Journal of Korean Society for Atmospheric Environment
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.157-166
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    • 2006
  • Ambient TSP at four sites in Korea and soil samples from the source regions of Asian Dust in northern China were collected and analyzed for 15 metal components and 6 water-soluble ions to conduct a chemical mass balance (CMB). CMB receptor model was used to estimate the source contribution of TSP during the Asian Dust period, and the model results showed that China soil was the largest source contributor, accounting for 81% of TSP ($458.2{\mu}g/m^3$). Vehicle emission and geological sources contributed to about 8.8% and 4.4% of aerosol mass, followed by sea salt (1.5%) and secondary aerosol (2.9%). Fuel combustion and industrial process sources were found to be relatively minor contributors to TSP (${\leq}1%$). In addition to source contribution estimates, this study tried to identify the origin of Asian Dust observed in Korea. Among all 13 China soil profiles presented in this study, the most adoptable profile which can project the case well was selected and considered as the origin of the applied case.

Evaluate Changes in Soil Chemical Properties Following FGD-Gypsum Application

  • Lee, Yong-Bok;Bigham, Jerry M.;Kim, Pil-Joo
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Agriculture
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.294-299
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    • 2007
  • Natural gypsum has been used as a soil amendment in the United States. However, flue gas desulfurization (FGD)-gypsum has not traditionally been used for agricultural purpose although it has potential benefit as a soil amendment. To expand use of FGD-gypsum for agricultural purpose, the effect of FGD-gypsum on soil chemical properties was investigated in the field scales. Application rates for this study were 0 (control), 1.1, and 2.2 Mg ha-1 of FGD-gypsum. After two year application, the soil samples were taken to 110 cm depth and sub-sampled at 10 cm intervals. The heavy metal contents in FGD-gypsum were lower than ceiling levels allowed by regulations for land-applied biosolids. Soil pH was not largely affected by FGD-gypsum application. Although degree of calcium (Ca) saturation in surface horizons increases only slightly with respect to the control, there is a clear decrease in exchangeable aluminum (Al). FGD-gypsum clearly increases the soil electrical conductivity (EC) with increasing application rate. Water-soluble Ca and sulfate is increased with FGD-gypsum application and these ions moved to a depth of at least 80 cm after only 2 years. We conclude that surface application of FGD-gypsum can mitigate toxicity of Al and deficiency of Ca in subsoil of acid soil.

Measurements at Kosan, Cheju Island during the Summer, 1994: (I) Aerosol Ion Composition (제주도 고산에서의 1994년 여름 측정: (I) 입자 이온 조성)

  • 김용표;김성주;진현철;백남준;이종훈;김진영;심상규;강창희;허철구
    • Journal of Korean Society for Atmospheric Environment
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    • v.12 no.3
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    • pp.297-305
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    • 1996
  • Aerosol measurements were carried out at Kosan, Cheju Island, Korea for the period from July 20 to August 10, 1994. Total suspended particles were collected by high volume samplers and PM 2.5 particles with gaseous volatile species were collected by a filter pack sampler and their ionic composition are analyzed. The average mass concentration of PM 2.5 particles was comparable to that of PM 3 particles collected during March, 1994 at the same site but the average non sea-salt sulfate concentration was higher that that of PM 3 particles, implying the fraction of anthropogenic air apllutants during this period is higher than that during March, 1994. During the measurement period, two distincitive patterns were observed, high concentrations of mass and water soluble ions were observed between July 20 and August 1 while those during after August 2 were low. Back trajectory analysis results show that air masses arriving at Kosan during the earlier period were mainly from Korea and Japan while those during the later period were from the North Pacific Ocean. It is suggested that the particle ion concentrations during the later period are marine background concentrations at Kosan during the summertime.

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Integrated Modeling of Chloride Binding Isotherm of Concrete Based on Physical and Chemical Mechanisms (물리화학적 메커니즘에 기이한 큰크리트의 염화물 흡착 등온에 대한 모델링)

  • Yoon, In-Seok
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2006.11a
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    • pp.537-540
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    • 2006
  • Over the past few decades, a considerable number of studies on the durability of concrete have been carried out extensively. A lot of improvements have been achieved especially in modeling of ionic flows. However, the majority of these researches have not dealt with the chloride binding isotherm based on the mechanism, although chloride binding capacity can significantly impact on the total service life of concrete under marine environment. The purpose of this study is to develop the model of chloride binding isotherm based on the individual mechanism. It is well known that chlorides ions in concrete can be present; free chlorides dissolved in the pore solution, chemical bound chlorides reacted with the hydration compounds of cement, and physical bound attracted to the surface of C-S-H grains. First, sub-model for water soluble chloride content is suggested as a function of pore solution and degree of saturation. Second, chemical model is suggested separately to estimate the response of binding capacity due to C-S-H and Friedel's salt. Finally, physical bound chloride content is estimated to consider a surface area of C-S-H nano-grains and the distance limited by the Van der Waals force. The new model of chloride binding isotherm suggested in this study is based on their intrinsic binding mechanisms and hydration reaction of concrete. Accordingly, it is possible to characterize chloride binding isotherm at the arbitrary stage of hydration time and arbitrary location from the surface of concrete. Comparative study with experimental data of published literature is accomplished to validity this model.

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Chemical Mass Composition of Ambient Aerosol over Jeju City (제주시 지역 미세먼지의 변동과 화학적 구성 특성)

  • Lee, Ki-Ho;Kim, Su-Mi;Kim, Kil-Seong;Hu, Chul-Goo
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.29 no.5
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    • pp.495-506
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    • 2020
  • This study investigated the nitrate formation process, and mass closure of Particulate Matter (PM) were calculated over the urbanized area of Jeju Island. The data for eight water-soluble inorganic ions and nineteen elements in PM2.5 and PM10 were used. The results show that the nitrate concentration increased as excess ammonium increased in ammonium-rich samples. Furthermore, nitrate formation was not as important in ammonium-poor samples as it was in previous studies. According to the sum of the measured species, approximately 45~53% of gravimetric mass of PM remained unidentified. To calculate the mass closure for both PM2.5 and PM10, PM chemical components were categorized into secondary inorganic aerosol, crustal matter, sea salt, trace matter and unidentified matter. The results by the mass reconstruction of PM components show that the portion of unidentified matter was decreased from 52.7% to 44.0% in PM2.5 and from 45.1% to 29.1% in PM10, despite the exclusion of organic matter and elemental carbon.

Purification, Characterization and Application of a Cold Active Lipase from Marine Bacillus cereus HSS

  • Hassan, Sahar WM.;Abd El Latif, Hala H.;Beltagy, Ehab A.
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.50 no.1
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    • pp.71-80
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    • 2022
  • Lipases (triacylglycerol acylhydrolases [EC 3.1.1.3]) are water-soluble enzymes. They catalyze the hydrolysis of fats and oils. A cold-active lipase from marine Bacillus cereus HSS, isolated from the Mediterranean Sea, Alexandria, Egypt, was purified and characterized. The total purification depending on lipase activity was 438.9 fold purification recording 632 U/mg protein. The molecular weight of the purified lipase was estimated to be 65 kDa using sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The optimum substrate concentration, enzyme concentration, pH, and temperature were 1.5 mM, 100 µl, pH 6 and 10℃, respectively. The lipase was tolerant to NaCl concentrations ranging from 1.5 to 4.5%. The lipase was affected by the tested metal ions, and its activity was inhibited by 16% in the presence of 0.05 M SDS. The application of the cold-active lipase for the removal of an oil stain from a white cotton cloth showed that it is a promising biological agent for the treatment of oily wastes and other related applications. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of the purification and characterization of a lipase from marine B. cereus HSS isolated from the Mediterranean Sea.

Time-dependent changes of fruit metabolites studied by 1H NMR

  • Park, Sung Jean
    • Journal of the Korean Magnetic Resonance Society
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.24-33
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    • 2022
  • The browning phenomenon of fruits can be easily observed when fruits or vegetables (apples, pears, bananas, potatoes, etc.) are cut with a knife and the part turns brown. When this browning occurs, changes in taste, color, and nutrients usually are introduced. The cause of this browning phenomenon has been well studied for a long time, but these studies have mainly focused on preventing deterioration of processed foods during food processing or storage. Resultantly, there are few studies on how much changes in nutrients (saccharides, amino acids, fats, water-soluble low molecular weight ammonium ions, etc.) are caused by browning. The purpose of this study is to determine the change in nutrients during browning using apple as a model fruit. We conducted a comparative study on how much the nutrient fluctuations differ depending on the presence or absence of pretreatment such as the application of heat. All analysis was conducted using 1H NMR. The ANOVA analysis showed that the concentrations of 4 amino acids (alanine, asparagine, isoleucine, and valine), 3 types of sugars (fructose, glucose, and xylose), 1 type of organic acid (lactate) and choline were significantly increased in samples showing browning. In addition, the groups before and after browning were clearly separated using multivariate statistical analysis methods (PCA, PLS-DA), which was greatly contributed by two sugar components (fructose and glucose) present in high concentrations in apples.

Effects of Crustal Species on Characteristics of Aerosols: Simulation of Measurements at Kosan, Cheju Island, 1994 (토양 성분이 입자 특성에 미치는 영향: 제주도 고산에서의 1994년 측정결과 모사)

  • 김용표;문길주
    • Journal of Korean Society for Atmospheric Environment
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    • v.12 no.3
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    • pp.289-296
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    • 1996
  • Effects of crustal species on the characteristics of ambient particles were studied by applying a gas-particle equilibrium model, SCAPE, to the measurements at Kosan, Cheju Island during the spring and summer, 1994. Two cases were simulated; the measured composition was used without any modification (case 1), and the metal ion concentrations originated from crust were subtracted from the measured particle composition (case 2). Total suspended particles (TSPs) were collected by an automatic high volume tape sampler during spring period and by high volume samplers during summer period. The fine particles, PM 2.5, and gaseous volatile species were collected using a filter pack smapler during summer period. The water soluble ion concentrations were analyzed from all the particle samples. According to the simulation results, the effect of crustal elements on the chemical composition of particles is negligible for both TSP particles and PM 2.5 particles. Acidity of particles measured at Kosan, however, is affected by the change of the concentrations of crustal species, stronger effects for TSP particles than for PM 2.5 particles during summer, and stronger effects during summer than spring for TSP particle. The average pH decrease due to the absence of crustal species was about 0.10 for PM 2.5 particle during summer and 1.51 and 0.85 for TSP particles during summer spring, respectively. Water contents of PM 2.5 particles for both cases are comparable to each other. Estimated water content of TSP particles for case 2 is higher than that for case 1 by about 4 $\sim 6 \mum/m^3$ because salts of metal ions are not hygroscopic.

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Ecophysiological Characteristics of Chenopodiaceous Plants - An Approach through Inorganic and Organic Solutes - (명아주과 식물의 생리생태학적 특성 - 무기 및 유기용질을 통한 접근 -)

  • Choo, Yeon-Sik;Song, Seung-Dal
    • The Korean Journal of Ecology
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    • v.23 no.5
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    • pp.397-406
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    • 2000
  • In order to clarify the ecophysiological characteristics of Chenopodiaceae which widely distribute on saline and arid habitats, we collected 10 chenopodiaceous plant species, examined their inorganic and organic solute patterns, and confirmed several common physiological characteristics. In spite of high soil Ca/sup 2+/ contents, chenopodiaceous plants had a little water-soluble Ca within cells, but contained high contents of acid-soluble Ca particularly as a result of Ca-oxalate formation. These plant species also showed accumulation of inorganic ions such as K/sup +/, NO₃/sup -/ and Cl/sup -/, and Na/sup +/especially in saline habitats instead of K/sup +/ Meanwhile, with respect to nitrogen metabolism they retained high N contents in leaves, but showed very low amino acid contents. Additionally, they contained very little proline known to act as a cytoplasmic osmolyte. To ascertain whether this physiological characteristics in the field also can be found under controlled conditions, 7 chenopodiaceous plants (Atriplex gmelini, Corispermum stauntonii, Salicornia herbacea, Suaeda aspayagoides, Suaeda japonica, Chenopodium album var. centrorubrum, C. serotinum) were selected and cultivated under salt treatments. As well as field-grown plants, selected plant species showed similar solute pattern in growth experiment. In summary, the family of Chenopodiaceae represents the following physiological properties; high storage capacity for inorganic ions (especially alkali cations, nitrate and chloride), oxalate synthesis to maintain lower soluble Ca contents within cytoplasm, and low contents of amino acids. In addition to some characteristics mentioned above, the physiological plasticities of Chenopodiaceae which can properly regulate their ion and solute pattern according to soil conditions may enable its representative to grow in dry sand dune and salt marsh habitats.

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