5 results match your criteria: "ACROSS and School of Chemistry[Affiliation]"
Funct Plant Biol
November 2016
School of Land and Food, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 54, Hobart 7001, Australia.
The effects of NaCl stress and K+ nutrition on photosynthetic parameters of isolated chloroplasts were investigated using PAM fluorescence. Intact mesophyll cells were able to maintain optimal photosynthetic performance when exposed to salinity for more than 24h whereas isolated chloroplasts showed declines in both the relative electron transport rate (rETR) and the maximal photochemical efficiency of PSII (Fv/Fm) within the first hour of treatment. The rETR was much more sensitive to salt stress compared with Fv/Fm, with 40% inhibition of rETR observed at apoplastic NaCl concentration as low as 20mM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chim Acta
November 2013
University of Tasmania, ACROSS and School of Chemistry, Hobart, Australia.
Electrophoresis
June 2013
ACROSS and School of Chemistry, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia.
Electromigration methods including CE and ITP are attractive for incorporation in microfluidic devices because they are relatively easily adaptable to miniaturization. After its popularity in the 1970s, ITP has made a comeback in microfluidic format (μ-ITP, micro-ITP) driven by the advantages of the steady-state boundary, the self-focusing effect, and the ability to aid in preconcentrating analytes in the sample while removing matrix components. In this review, we provide an overview of the developments in the area of μ-ITP in a context of the historic developments with a focus on recent developments in experimental and computational ITP and discuss possible future trends.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chim Acta
November 2012
University of Tasmania, ACROSS and School of Chemistry, Hobart, Australia.
Portable and field deployable analytical instruments are attractive in many fields including medical diagnostics, where point of care and on-site diagnostics systems capable of providing rapid quantitative results have the potential to vastly improve the productivity and the quality of medical care. Isotachophoresis (ITP) is a well known electrophoretic separation technique previously demonstrated as suitable for miniaturization in microfluidic chip format (chip-ITP). In this work, a purpose-designed ITP chip compatible with a commercial end-used targeted microfluidic system was used to study different injection protocols and to evaluate the effect of the length of the separation channel on the analytical performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrophoresis
November 2012
University of Tasmania, ACROSS and School of Chemistry, Hobart, Australia.