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affinity
(redirected from chemical attraction)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.43 sec.

affinity

In chemistry, the force of attraction (see bond) between atoms that helps to keep them in combination in a molecule. The term is also applied to attraction between molecules, such as those of biochemical significance (for example, between enzymes and substrate molecules). This is the basis for affinity chromatography, by which biologically important compounds are separated.

The atoms of a given element may have a greater affinity for the atoms of one element than for another (for example, hydrogen has a great affinity for chlorine, with which it easily and rapidly combines to form hydrogen chloride, but has little or no affinity for argon).

The affinity of monoclonal antibodies for specific proteins forms the basis of many medical diagnostic tests, for example pregnancy testing.

affinity

In law, relationship by marriage not blood (for example, between a husband and his wife's blood relatives, between a wife and her husband's blood relatives, or between step-parent and stepchild), which may legally preclude their marriage. It is distinguished from consanguinity or blood relationship.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The triple bond between a nitrogen molecule's atoms is one of the strongest chemical attractions around.
Though they couldn't identify the protein responsible for this phenomenon of chemical attraction, they knew that neural axons responded to a signal from cells in the lower spinal cord of embryonic rats.
It's biologically plausible that there should be a chemical attraction between egg and sperm," says Robert Stillman, a reproductive endocrinologist at George Washington University in Washington, D.
 
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