McIlvaine buffer
McIlvaine buffer is a buffer solution composed of citric acid and disodium hydrogen phosphate, also known as citrate-phosphate buffer. It has been introduced in 1921 by a United States agronomist Theodore Clinton McIlvaine from West Virginia University, and can be prepared in pH 2.2 to 8 by mixing two stock solutions.[1]
pH | 0.2 M Na2HPO4 (mL) | 0.1 M citric acid (mL) |
---|---|---|
2.2 | 00.40 | 19.60 |
2.4 | 01.24 | 18.76 |
2.6 | 02.18 | 17.82 |
2.8 | 03.17 | 16.83 |
3.0 | 04.11 | 15.89 |
3.2 | 04.94 | 15.06 |
3.4 | 05.70 | 14.30 |
3.6 | 06.44 | 13.56 |
3.8 | 07.10 | 12.90 |
4.0 | 07.71 | 12.29 |
4.2 | 08.28 | 11.72 |
4.4 | 08.82 | 11.18 |
4.6 | 09.35 | 10.65 |
4.8 | 09.86 | 10.14 |
5.0 | 10.30 | 09.70 |
5.2 | 10.72 | 09.28 |
5.4 | 11.15 | 08.85 |
5.6 | 11.60 | 08.40 |
5.8 | 12.09 | 07.91 |
6.0 | 12.63 | 07.37 |
6.2 | 13.22 | 06.78 |
6.4 | 13.85 | 06.15 |
6.6 | 14.55 | 05.45 |
6.8 | 15.45 | 04.55 |
7.0 | 16.47 | 03.53 |
7.2 | 17.39 | 02.61 |
7.4 | 18.17 | 01.83 |
7.6 | 18.73 | 01.27 |
7.8 | 19.15 | 00.85 |
8.0 | 19.45 | 00.55 |
References
- 1 2 McIlvaine TC (1921). "A buffer solution for colorimetric comparison" (pdf). J. Biol. Chem. 49 (1): 183–186.
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