Anomalous behavior of electrical conductivity of solubilized collagen solutions with thermal denaturation

1993 
The temperature dependence of the electrical conductivity, σ, for a collagen solution was measured in the temperature region including the thermal denaturation temperature, td. The σ increased with temperature, t, but decreased at ca. 40°C, and then again increased. In this temperature region, a change of optical rotation, αD, was observed. The change is due to the thermal denaturation. The differential curve of σ vs. t gave clear deflection points and a large peak at ca. 40°C. The td could be estimated from the peak temperature. The td decreased with the increase in the concentration of collagen and with the decrease in the heating rate. These measurements were carried out for the collagen prepared by various methods. Some of them showed one peak; others had two peaks. The td obtained by the measurement of σ correlated with that obtained by the measurement of αD. The activation energy of σ, ΔEa, obtained from the linear relationship between log σ and 1/T, increased with the concentration of collagen, but was unchanged for the heating rate. The ΔEa obtained for various types of collagen showed a constant value. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []