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SPECTROSCOPY, IMAGING, OTHER TECHNIQUES |
1 University of Pennsylvania
2 Univ. of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
3 Unversity of Pennsylvania
4 University of Texas
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: vanderko{at}mail.med.upenn.edu.
Submitted on May 10, 2006
Revised on June 29, 2006
Accepted on 27 July 2006
| Abstract |
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pK, as predicted by Marcus theory. The
rate of proton transfer from these acids saturates at high
concentration, as expected for the existence of an encounter complex. Trihydrogen-phosphate is a much better proton donor than dihydrogen- and monohydrogen-phosphate, as can be seen by the pH dependence. The proton donating ability of phosphate does not saturate at high concentrations, but increases with increasing phosphate concentration. We suggest that enhanced rate of proton transfer at high phosphate concentrations may be due to the dual proton donating and accepting nature of phosphate, in analogy to the Grotthuss mechanism for proton transfer in water. It is suggested that in molecular structures containing multiple phosphates, such as membrane surfaces and DNA, proton transfer rates will be enhanced by this mechanism.
Key Words: H-bonding, excited state, phosphate, proton transfer
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