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  2. Sodium cocoate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium_cocoate

    Sodium cocoate is a mixture of fatty acid salts of coconut oil that is used in some soaps. [ 1 ] Sodium cocoate is produced by hydrolysis of the ester linkages in coconut oil with sodium hydroxide , a strong base .

  3. International Nomenclature of Cosmetic Ingredients - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Nomenclature...

    INCI names often differ greatly from systematic chemical nomenclature or from more common trivial names and is a mixture of conventional scientific names, Latin and English words. INCI nomenclature conventions "are continually reviewed and modified when necessary to reflect changes in the industry, technology, and new ingredient developments". [2]

  4. Ethidium bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethidium_bromide

    Ethidium bromide (or homidium bromide, [2] chloride salt homidium chloride) [3] [4] is an intercalating agent commonly used as a fluorescent tag (nucleic acid stain) in molecular biology laboratories for techniques such as agarose gel electrophoresis. It is commonly abbreviated as EtBr, which is also an abbreviation for bromoethane.

  5. GelRed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GelRed

    GelRed is an intercalating nucleic acid stain used in molecular genetics for agarose gel DNA electrophoresis. GelRed structurally consists of two ethidium subunits that are bridged by a linear oxygenated spacer. [1] [2] GelRed is a fluorophore, and its optical properties are essentially identical to those of ethidium bromide.

  6. Staining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staining

    A Ziehl–Neelsen stain is an acid-fast stain used to stain species of Mycobacterium tuberculosis that do not stain with the standard laboratory staining procedures such as Gram staining. This stain is performed through the use of both red coloured carbol fuchsin that stains the bacteria and a counter stain such as methylene blue .

  7. Stains-all - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stains-all

    Stains-all stains nucleic acids, anionic proteins, anionic polysaccharides such as alginate and pectinate, [10] hyaluronic acid and dermatan sulfate, [5] heparin, heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate. [6] It is used in SDS-PAGE, agarose gel electrophoresis and histologic staining, e.g. staining of growth lines in bones. [11]

  8. Orange G - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orange_G

    Orange G can be used as an electrophoretic color marker to monitor the process of agarose gel electrophoresis, running approximately at the size of a 50 Base pair (bp) DNA molecule, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Bromophenol blue and xylene cyanol can also be used for this purpose. (However, the apparent "size" of all these dyes varies ...

  9. Crystal violet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_violet

    The stain proved popular and in 1884 was used by Hans Christian Gram to stain bacteria. He credited Paul Ehrlich for the aniline-gentian violet mixture. [ 32 ] Grübler's gentian violet was probably very similar, if not identical, to Lauth's methyl violet, which had been used as a stain by Victor André Cornil in 1875.