Encyclo - De online Nederlandstalige encyclopedie뮠in 驮 oogopslag
Encyclopedia Sources Categories About Encyclo      Enzyklopädie-DE Encyclopedie-NL
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Index
Agriculture and Industry
Animals and Nature
Architecture and Buildings
Arts
Business and Law
Earth and Environment
Economy and Finance
Education
Electronics and Engineering
Film and Animation
Food and Drink
General
General technical and industrial
Government and organisations
Health and Medicine
History and Culture
Hobbies and Crafts
Language and Literature
Legal
Management
Mathematics and statistics
Meteorology and astronomy
Military and Defence
Music and Sound
People and society
Sciences
Sport and Leisure
Technical and IT
Travel and Transportation

Look up: Zwitterion

  1. Zwitterion
    'Zwitter' is german for 'hybrid', and zwitterions are chemical species that manage to be both cations and anions at the same time. How can this come about? Consider ammonium acetate (NH4CH3COO). It is a perfectly ordinary salt, and when dissolved in water splits into its two constituent ions, NH4+ a...
    Found on http://www.kcpc.usyd.edu.au/discovery/gl

  2. Zwitterion
    Zwitterion is an ion that has both a positive and a negative charge, such as an amino acid in neutral solution.
    Found on http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/brow

  3. Zwitterion
    A particle that contains both positively charged and negatively charged groups. This results in a net charge of zero.Such as an amino acid in neutral solution.amino acids (NH2-CHR-COOH) can form zwitterions (+NH3-CHR-COO-)
    Found on http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/sour

  4. zwitterion
    A particle that contains both positively charged and negatively charged groups. For example, amino acids (NH2-CHR-COOH) can form zwitterions (+NH3-CHR-COO-)
    Found on http://antoine.frostburg.edu/chem/senese

  5. Zwitterion
    An ion that has a positive and negative charge on the same group of atoms. It is also called dipolar ion.
    Found on http://www.chemicalglossary.net/definiti

  6. Zwitterion
    Natural state of free amino acids in which a-amino group is protonated giving a positive charge and a carboxyl group is deprotonated giving a negative charge.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/visitor-contrib

  7. zwitterion
    <chemistry> A zwitterion is a dipolar ion that is capable of carrying both a positive and negative charge simultaneously. ... The best example of this are amino acids which have a basic NH2 group and an acidic COOH group. What usually happens is that the H from the COOH group (carboxylic acid ...
    Found on http://www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictiona

  8. zwitterion
    (tsvit´er-i″on) an ion that has both positive and negative regions of charge; called also dipolar ion.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21001

  9. zwitterion
    (from the article `liquid`) ...in physiology. Many molecules that occur in biological systems bear electric charges; a large molecule that has a positive electric charge at one ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/z/12

  10. zwitterion
    Ion that has both a positive and a negative charge, such as an amino acid in neutral solution. For example, glycine contains both a basic amino group (NH2) and an acidic carboxyl group (COOH); when these are both ionized in aqueous solution, the acid group loses a proton while the amino group gains one, and the molecule i...
    Found on http://www.talktalk.co.uk/reference/ency

  11. Zwitterion
    . The isomer on the right is a zwitterion. In chemistry, a `zwitterion` ( ; from ˈtsvɪtɐ--> "hybrid") is a neutral molecule with a positive and a negative electrical charge (n.b. not dipoles) at different locations within that molecule. Zwitterions are sometimes also called...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zwitterion



...

14 February 2012

This day in history:
/calendar/ February 14 is Valentine's Day. Although it is celebrated as a lovers' holiday today, with the giving of candy, flowers, or other gifts between couples in love, it originated in 5th Century Rome as a tribute to St. Valentine, a Catholic bishop. The first Valentine card grew out of this practice. The first true Valentine card was sent in 1415 by Charles, duke of Orleans, to his wife. He was imprisoned in the Tower of London at the time. Cupid, another symbol of the holiday, became associated with it because he was the son of Venus, the Roman god of love and beauty. Cupid often appears on Valentine cards. read more

Encyclo in your browser

Encyclo in the search bar of your browser? Click for more info! Would you like to use Encyco more often? Add an (extra) search option to the search field of your browser. Installed in 3 seconds, easy to remove.
More info

Statistics

Encyclo has been online since october 15th 2007. It currently contains 3,485,243 words from 1122 sources. The words are listed in 32 categories.

Search

Type a word and press the `Search` button.

Recent searches

The most recent searches on Encyclo. Between brackets you will find the number of results and number of related results.
B?elwiesen (14/0)
Algolagnia (6/1)
Allescheria (2/2)
condensing (8/21)
BEA (2/25)
anesthetic (18/14)
The (2/25)
ligamentum (2/25)
Gippy (2/3)
Microphyte (4/0)
Eumorphism (2/0)
Money (3/25)
Reasonably (4/9)
Prosectorium (2/0)
Pigwidgeon (2/0)
ossein (6/0)
Pigwidgeon (2/0)
Darboy, (2/3)
Globe, (2/4)
Llewellyn (2/25)
Microphyte (4/0)
Pulpiter (2/0)
zygopodium (2/0)
Conwy (5/16)

© Encyclo MMXI
Contact Privacy