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Title: Solid–Liquid Equilibria in Aqueous Solutions of Tris, Tris-NaCl, Tris-TrisHCl, and Tris-(TrisH) 2 SO 4 at Temperatures from 5 to 45 °C
Award ID(s):
1840868 1850983 1744702
PAR ID:
10280688
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Journal of Chemical & Engineering Data
Volume:
66
Issue:
1
ISSN:
0021-9568
Page Range / eLocation ID:
437 to 455
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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  1. Understanding the corrosion behavior of glasses in near-neutral environments is crucial for many technologies including glasses for regenerative medicine and nuclear waste immobilization. To maintain consistent pH values throughout experiments in the pH = 7 to 9 regime, buffer solutions containing tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (“Tris”, or sometimes called THAM) are recommended in ISO standards 10993-14 and 23317 for evaluating biomaterial degradation and utilized throughout glass dissolution behavior literature—a key advantage being the absence of dissolved alkali/alkaline earth cations ( i.e. Na + or Ca 2+ ) that can convolute experimental results due to solution feedback effects. Although Tris is effective at maintaining the solution pH, it has presented concerns due to the adverse artificial effects it produces while studying glass corrosion, especially in borosilicate glasses. Therefore, many open questions still remain on the topic of borosilicate glass interaction with Tris-based solutions. We have approached this topic by studying the dissolution behavior of a sodium borosilicate glass in a wide range of Tris-based solutions at 65 °C with varied acid identity (Tris–HCl vs. Tris–HNO 3 ), buffer concentration (0.01 M to 0.5 M), and pH (7–9). The results have been discussed in reference to previous studies on this topic and the following conclusions have been made: (i) acid identity in Tris-based solutions does not exhibit a significant impact on the dissolution behavior of borosilicate glasses, (ii) ∼0.1 M Tris-based solutions are ideal for maintaining solution pH in the absence of obvious undesirable solution chemistry effects, and (iii) Tris–boron complexes can form in solution as a result of glass dissolution processes. The complex formation, however, exhibits a distinct temperature-dependence, and requires further study to uncover the precise mechanisms by which Tris-based solutions impact borosilicate glass dissolution behavior. 
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  3. Abstract Buffers of known quality for the calibration of seawater pHTmeasurements are not widely or commercially available. Although there exist published compositions for the 0.04 mol kg‐H2O−1equimolar buffer 2‐amino‐2‐hydroxymethyl‐1,3‐propanediol (TRIS)‐TRIS · H+in synthetic seawater, there are no explicit procedures that describe preparing this buffer to achieve a particular pHTwith a known uncertainty. Such a procedure is described here which makes use of easily acquired laboratory equipment and techniques to produce a buffer with a pHTwithin 0.006 of the published pHTvalue originally assigned by DelValls and Dickson (1998), 8.094 at 25°C. Such a buffer will be suitable for the calibration of pH measurements expected to fulfil the “weather” uncertainty goal of the Global Ocean Acidification Observation Network of 0.02 in pHT, an uncertainty goal appropriate to “identify relative spatial patterns and short‐term variation.” 
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