Results 311 to 320 of about 372,530 (379)

Study of humic-like substances of dissolved organic matter using size exclusion chromatography and chemometrics

open access: hybrid
Sylvain Faixo   +7 more
openalex   +1 more source

Size-exclusion chromatography combined with DIA-MS enables deep proteome profiling of extracellular vesicles from melanoma plasma and serum. [PDF]

open access: yesCell Mol Life Sci
Lattmann E   +9 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Investigating the secondary interactions of packing materials for size-exclusion chromatography of therapeutic proteins.

Journal of Chromatography A, 2022
Size exclusion chromatography has become an essential tool for the protein therapeutics industry. Conceptually, it is a simple form of chromatography that is driven by entropy and sieving effects.
S. Fekete   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Characterization of urinary exosomes purified with size exclusion chromatography and ultracentrifugation.

Journal of Proteome Research, 2020
Exosomes, a subtype of extracellular vesicles secreted by mammalian cells with a typical size range of 30-150 nm, have been implicated in many biological processes as intercellular communication carriers.
Sheng Guan   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Size exclusion chromatography

1999
Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) separates macromolecules according to their hydrodynamic volume and has become the dominant method for the determination of molecular weight or mass distribution (MWD or MMD) of synthetic polymers [1].
Sadao Mori, Howard G. Barth
  +4 more sources

Preparative Size-Exclusion Chromatography

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2006
Size-exclusion chromatography in group separation mode is an efficient unit operation for the separation of influenza virions from host cell protein [1]. In order to avoid this operation becoming a bottleneck in vaccine production processes, however, the column load has to be optimised balancing productivity with purity.
Kalbfuss, B., Reichl, U.
openaire   +4 more sources

Size exclusion chromatography

Polymer, 1989
Virtually all synthetic polymers have a molecular weight distribution (MWD) which may be represented by the cumulative weight distribution I(M) or differential weight distribution w(M) as a function of molecular weight M.1 Although the calculation of w(M) for various types of polymerization mechanism was already well documented,2 an accurate and ...
  +4 more sources

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