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Flow birefringence

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In biochemistry, flow birefringence is a hydrodynamic technique for measuring the rotational diffusion constants (or, equivalently, the rotational drag coefficients). The birefringence of a solution sandwiched between two concentric cylinders is measured as a function of the difference in rotational speed between the inner and outer cylinders. The flow tends to orient an ellipsoidal particle (typically, a protein, virus, etc.) in one direction, whereas rotational diffusion (tumbling) causes the molecule to become disoriented. The equilibrium between these two processes as a function of the flow provides a measure of the axial ratio of the ellipsoidal particle.

See also

Protein structural analysis
High resolution
Medium resolution
Spectroscopic
Translational diffusion
Rotational diffusion
Chemical
Thermodynamic
Computational
←Tertiary structureQuaternary structure→


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