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Topic: High phosphate solution  (Read 5278 times)

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Offline steve29er

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High phosphate solution
« on: September 21, 2011, 10:17:49 PM »
I am trying to prepare a H2PO4 solution that maintains physiological electrolyte balance and pH. Is it possible to obtain a solution with 100 mM H2PO4, 135 mM Na2+, 5 mM K+ and 109 mM Cl-?
The only solution I can currently prepare requires too much sodium or the use of too much acid and then the pH is not 7.4. Any help/advice/guidance would be greatly appreciated. I am not even sure that such a solution is possible...

Offline Borek

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Re: High phosphate solution
« Reply #1 on: September 22, 2011, 04:57:09 AM »
H2PO4 or H2PO4-?

Na2+?

ChemBuddy chemical calculators - stoichiometry, pH, concentration, buffer preparation, titrations.info

Offline AWK

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Re: High phosphate solution
« Reply #2 on: September 22, 2011, 08:14:39 AM »
Quote
physiological electrolyte balance and pH
What exactly does it mean for you (values of osmotic pressure and pH?)
Assuming your solution contains 100 mM of phosphates, 135 mM Na+, 5 mM K+ and 109 mM Cl- its pH can be close to 6 and ionic strength close to 0.25. Both values a rather far from physiological parameters.
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Offline steve29er

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Re: High phosphate solution
« Reply #3 on: September 23, 2011, 09:07:11 PM »
Yes AWK. That is the issue. The values are not close enough to physiological pH and osmotic pressure. I am not a chemistry expert (far from it actually), but I was just wondering if there was any way to create a pH balanced/physiological solution that has 100 mM of phosphate (whether you use straight H3PO4 or not. The concern I have is that to obtain a high phosphate solution using my current methods/solution you must add too much Na+ as the cation of H2PO4-. The addition of Na+ as the cation throws off the physiological levels of Na+. Is there anyway around this?

Offline AWK

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Re: High phosphate solution
« Reply #4 on: October 25, 2011, 10:41:26 AM »
You can prepare phosphate buffer with pH 7.4 containing chlorides and specified ratio [Na+]/[K+], but probably even 100 mM (sodium/potassium) hydrogen phosphates alone gives you to high osmotic pressure.

http://nature.berkeley.edu/soilmicro/methods/phosphate%20buffer.pdf
http://home.fuse.net/clymer/buffers/phos2.html
http://www.bioinformatics.org/JaMBW/5/4/index.html
http://www.biomol.net/en/tools/buffercalculator.htm
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