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Specialty Chemistry Forums => Biochemistry and Chemical Biology Forum => Topic started by: lab2015 on December 01, 2016, 11:42:09 AM

Title: PBS for samples Dilution - ELISA
Post by: lab2015 on December 01, 2016, 11:42:09 AM
I need to dilute my samples with 0.01 mol/L PBS (pH=7.0 - 7.2)
I have a 10x  PBS :
1x (pH = 7.4±0.1) contains:
11.9 mM Phosphate
137 mM Sodium Chloride
2.7 mM Potassium Chloride

it looks like it has the concentration that I need.

Would you please tell me if this is right? should the diffrence in pH be corrected? I need pH= 7 to 7.2 while the pH here is 7.4±0.1

Many thanks,
Title: Re: PBS for samples Dilution - ELISA
Post by: Yggdrasil on December 02, 2016, 11:22:30 AM
You probably would not have problems using a pH 7.4 buffer versus ph 7.2.
Title: Re: PBS for samples Dilution - ELISA
Post by: Babcock_Hall on December 02, 2016, 12:03:30 PM
If you dilute a 10X buffer to 1X, the pH should move somewhat.  One reason is that the change in ionic strength affects the practical pKa value.  Dilution of an acidic buffer increases the pH; basic buffers should behave oppositely.  Both Perrin and Boyd's book and Beynon and Easterby's book mention this effect.  The change in pH upon dilution might be small enough not to worry about, but there is no harm in being aware of it.
Title: Re: PBS for samples Dilution - ELISA
Post by: lab2015 on December 05, 2016, 04:34:33 AM
You probably would not have problems using a pH 7.4 buffer versus ph 7.2.

Thank you for your reply