Spectrometry
Luminescence
Electroanalytic Methods
Chromatography
Carbohydrates
100
This is described as photons of energy travelling in waves such as cosmic and microwaves.
What is electromagnetic radiation?
100
This is a light emission and scattering technique that measures the light emitted by an excited atom.
What is fluorometry?
100
A type of cell used in electrochemistry in which external electromotive force is applied to force current to flow through it.
What is an electrolytic cell?
100
In any chromatographic technique, this is the part through which the mobile phase flows.
What is the stationary phase?
100
It is a classification of carbohydrate in which the carbonyl group in the middle is linked to 2 other carbon atoms.
What is a ketose?
200
It is a component of the spectrophotometer which prevents scattered light from entering the monochromator.
What is an entrance slit?
200
It refers to any decrease in fluorescence resulting from environmental changes like changes in pH.
What is quenching?
200
This is a kind of electrode that generally consists of a metal and its salt in contact with a solution containing the same anion.
What is a reference electrode?
200
It is a separation technique based on relative solubility in an organic, nonpolar solvent and an aqueous, polar solvent.
What is partition chromatography?
200
This is a detour of glucose-6-phosphate from the glycolytic pathway to become 6-phosphogluconate.
What is the Hexose Monophosphate Shunt?
300
This is a principle involving the measurement of a colored solution with a standard.
What is colorimetry?
300
A technique in light emission and scattering which measures the light scattered by a solution depending on wavelength and particle size.
What is nephelometry?
300
An electroanalytic method defined as the migration of charged macromolecules in a porous support medium like cellulose acetate.
What is zone electrophoresis?
300
The distance a component migrates compared with the distance the solvent front moves is this.
What is the retention factor?
300
A group of metabolic diseases characterized by hyperglycemia due to defects in insulin secretion and/or its action.
What is Diabetes Mellitus?
400
In spectrophotometry, this is the light blocked calculated by the negative logarithm of transmittance.
What is absorbance?
400
This is a technique involving oxidation reactions of luminol, acridinium esters and dioxetanes.
What is chemiluminescence?
400
In electrophoretic techniques, this is a molecule whose net charge can be either positive or negative.
What is an ampholyte?
400
In chromatography, it is a basic component of HPLC that forces the mobile phase through the column at a much greater velocity.
What is a pump?
400
An index for long term plasma glucose control which indicates compliance and efficacy of treatment.
What is Glycosylated Hemoglobin?
500
A kind of spectrophotometry that measures light absorbed by ground state atoms because the element is not excited in the flame.
What is atomic absorption spectrophotometry?
500
A luminescent technique that depends on particle size and concentration of the suspension.
What is turbidimetry?
500
This pertains to the movement of buffer ions and solvent relative to the fixed support in electrophoresis.
What is electroendosmosis?
500
A technique used to separate mixtures of compounds that are volatile or can be made volatile.
What is gas chromatography?
500
It is a method of glucose determination that uses BaSO4 to remove non-glucose reducing substances in the sample.
What is Nelson Somogyi?
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