Advancement: Difference between revisions

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  Communicated by [[Gnaiger E]] 2018-10-15
  Communicated by [[Gnaiger E]] 2018-10-16
== Advancement per volume ==
:::: In typical liquid phase reactions the volume of the system does not change during the reaction. When oxygen consumption is measured (''ν''<sub>O2</sub> = -1 in the chemical reaction), then the volume-specific [[oxygen flux]] is the time derivative of the advancement of the reaction per unit volume [1], ''J''<sub>''V'',O2</sub> = d<sub>r</sub>''ξ''<sub>O2</sub>/d''t''∙''V''<sup>-1</sup> [(mol∙s­<sup>-1</sup>)∙L­<sup>-1</sup>]. The rate of O<sub>2</sub> concentration change is d''c''<sub>O2</sub>/d''t'' [(mol∙L­<sup>-1</sup>)∙s­<sup>-1</sup>], where concentration is ''c''<sub>O2</sub> = ''n''<sub>O2</sub>/''V''. There is a difference between (''1'') ''J''<sub>''V'',O2</sub> [mol∙s­<sup>-1</sup>∙L­<sup>-1</sup>] and (''2'') rate of concentration change [mol∙L­<sup>-1</sup>∙s­<sup>-1</sup>]. These merge to a single expression only in a closed system. In open systems, internal transformations (catabolic flux, O<sub>2</sub> consumption) are distinguished from external flux (such as O<sub>2</sub> supply). External fluxes of all substances are zero in closed systems [2].
 
 
== References ==
:::# Gnaiger E (1993) Nonequilibrium thermodynamics of energy transformations. Pure Appl Chem 65:1983-2002. - [[Gnaiger 1993 Pure Appl Chem |»Bioblast link«]]
:::# MitoEAGLE preprint 2018-10-16(43) Mitochondrial respiratory states and rates: Building blocks of mitochondrial physiology Part 1. - www.mitoeagle.org/index.php/MitoEAGLE_preprint_2018-02-08
 
 
{{MitoPedia concepts
{{MitoPedia concepts
|mitopedia concept=MiP concept, Ergodynamics
|mitopedia concept=MiP concept, Ergodynamics
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Revision as of 10:46, 16 October 2018


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


Advancement

Description

In an isomorphic analysis, any form of flow is the advancement of a process per unit of time, expressed in a specific motive unit [MU∙s-1], e.g., ampere for electric flow or current [A≡C∙s-1], watt for heat flow [W≡J∙s-1], and for chemical flow the unit is [mol∙s-1]. The corresponding isomorphic forces are the partial exergy (Gibbs energy) changes per advancement [J∙MU-1], expressed in volt for electric force [V≡J∙C-1], dimensionless for thermal force, and for chemical force the unit is [J∙mol-1], which deserves a specific acronym ([Jol]) comparable to volt. For chemical processes of reaction and diffusion, the advancement is the amount of motive substance [mol]. The concept was originally introduced by De Donder. Central to the concept of advancement is the stoichiometric number, νX, associated with each motive component X (transformant [1]).

In a chemical reaction, r, the motive entity is the stoichiometric amount of reactant, drnX, with stoichiometric number νX. The advancement of the chemical reaction, drξ [mol], is then defined as

drξ = drnX·νX-1

The flow of the chemical reaction, Ir [mol·s-1], is advancement per time,

Ir = drξ·dt-1

Abbreviation: dtrξ

Reference: Gnaiger_1993_Pure Appl Chem

Communicated by Gnaiger E 2018-10-16

Advancement per volume

In typical liquid phase reactions the volume of the system does not change during the reaction. When oxygen consumption is measured (νO2 = -1 in the chemical reaction), then the volume-specific oxygen flux is the time derivative of the advancement of the reaction per unit volume [1], JV,O2 = drξO2/dtV-1 [(mol∙s­-1)∙L­-1]. The rate of O2 concentration change is dcO2/dt [(mol∙L­-1)∙s­-1], where concentration is cO2 = nO2/V. There is a difference between (1) JV,O2 [mol∙s­-1∙L­-1] and (2) rate of concentration change [mol∙L­-1∙s­-1]. These merge to a single expression only in a closed system. In open systems, internal transformations (catabolic flux, O2 consumption) are distinguished from external flux (such as O2 supply). External fluxes of all substances are zero in closed systems [2].


References

  1. Gnaiger E (1993) Nonequilibrium thermodynamics of energy transformations. Pure Appl Chem 65:1983-2002. - »Bioblast link«
  2. MitoEAGLE preprint 2018-10-16(43) Mitochondrial respiratory states and rates: Building blocks of mitochondrial physiology Part 1. - www.mitoeagle.org/index.php/MitoEAGLE_preprint_2018-02-08


MitoPedia concepts: MiP concept, Ergodynamics 

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