By Jane A. Russell: (From The Department of Physiological Chemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven)
By Jane A. Russell: (From The Department of Physiological Chemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven)
By Jane A. Russell: (From The Department of Physiological Chemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven)
Test jar Free Chlorine-To 2.00 ml. of the hypochlorite solution add 10
ml. of water, 2 ml. of 5 per cent potassium iodide, and 1 ml. of glacial acetic
acid. Titrate with 0.100 N sodium thiosulfate (starch indicator); 7.5 to
8.0 ml. of thiosulfate should be required. Retest the strength of the solu-
tion occasionally.
3. Manganese salt. Manganous chloride or sulfate 0.003 M.
Color Development-Place in a calibrated test-tube or calorimeter tube
1.5 ml. of sample containing 0.5 to 6 y of ammonia N, 1 drop (about 0.05
mi.) of 0.003 M manganous salt solution, 1 ml. of alkaline phenol reagent,
and 0.5 ml. of hypochlorite solution. The two latter solutions should be
cold when added to the sample; loss of ammonia from the alkaline solution
DISCUSSION
The reaction as used by Van Slyke and Hiller and by Borsook was
carried out in strongly alkaline solution, the phenol reagent consisting of
25 per cent phenol dissolved in 20 per cent sodium hydroxide. In this
J. A. RUSSELL 459
circumstance, when the reaction takes place at or near loo”, the color formed
is not readily reproducible or suitable for photometric measurement.
At lower temperatures, as at 37”, recommended by Borsook, the reaction
takes some time to go to completion (1 to 2 hours) and the color is less than
that produced at 100”. However, if the final alkali concentration is made
equivalent to the molar strength of the phenol present (pH about 12), the
reaction may be carried out at loo”, with the production of color about 3
times as intense as t.hat produced by the more strongly alkaline reagent
1. Conway, E. J., Microdiffusion analysis and volumetric error, New York (1940).
2. Van Slyke, D. D., and Hiller, A., J. Biol. Chem., 102,499 (1933).
3. Borsook, H., .I. Biol. Chem., 110, 481 (1935).
4. Dole, M., The glass electrode, New York (1941).
5. Hinsburg, K., and Mucke, K., Biochem. Z., 297, 332 (1938).
THE COLORIMETRIC ESTIMATION OF
SMALL AMOUNTS OF AMMONIA BY
THE PHENOL-HYPOCHLORITE
REACTION
Jane A. Russell
J. Biol. Chem. 1944, 156:457-462.
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