Journal ArticleDOI
Viscosity of water at various temperatures
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This article is published in The Journal of Physical Chemistry.The article was published on 1969-01-01. It has received 612 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Relative viscosity & Temperature dependence of liquid viscosity.read more
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Enthalpy-entropy compensation phenomena in water solutions of proteins and small molecules: a ubiquitous property of water.
Rufus Lumry,Shyamala Rajender +1 more
TL;DR: It is tentatively concluded that the pattern is real, very common and a consequence of the properties of liquid water as a solvent regardless of the solutes and the solute processes studied, and that liquid water plays a direct role in many protein processes and may be a common participant in the physiological function of proteins.
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Thermophysical properties of seawater: a review of existing correlations and data
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the properties of seawater is presented in terms of regression equations as functions of temperature and salinity, and the available correlations for each property are summarized with their range of validity and accuracy.
The thermophysical properties of seawater: A review of existing correlations and data
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the properties of seawater is presented in terms of regression equations as functions of temperature and salinity, and the available correlations for each property are summarized with their range of validity and accuracy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Leaf Maximum Photosynthetic Rate and Venation Are Linked by Hydraulics
TL;DR: Sampling 43 species across the breadth of plant diversity from mosses to flowering plants, it was found that the post-vein traverse as determined by characters such as vein density, leaf thickness, and cell shape was strongly correlated with the hydraulic conductivity and maximum photosynthetic rate of foliage.
Book
Patterns in the ocean: Ocean processes and marine population dynamics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present solutions for nutrient transfer to osmotrophs in the full range of flow regimes for which solutions have been published, and extend some of those solutions to new parameter domains and flow environments.