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Female crimp terminal

Manufactured by RS Components

The female crimp-terminal is an electrical connector component designed to establish a secure and reliable connection. It is a tubular metal sleeve with an open end, engineered to be crimped onto the end of a wire, creating a permanent and conductive joint.

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2 protocols using female crimp terminal

1

Fabrication of Ag/AgCl Electrodes

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Silver wires (100 μm diameter, Sigma) were soldered into male crimp-terminals (RS Components). The tips of the wires were incubated in sodium hypochlorite, NaClO (10% active chlorine, Sigma) for 1 h to form Ag/AgCl electrodes. The tips of the electrodes were coated with a hydrogel layer by pipetting melted agarose (1% low-melt agarose, Sigma) onto their surfaces. For single DIB experiments, each electrode was plugged into a female crimp-terminal, which was attached to a micromanipulator (Narishige, NMN-21). The other end of the female crimp-terminal (RS Components) was soldered to a cable that terminated with a male crimp, which was connected to the headstage of the amplifier.
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2

Fabrication of Ag/AgCl Electrodes

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
Silver wires (100 μm diameter, Sigma) were soldered into male crimp-terminals (RS Components). The tips of the wires were incubated in sodium hypochlorite, NaClO (10% active chlorine, Sigma) for 45 min to form Ag/AgCl electrodes. The tips of the electrodes were coated with a hydrogel layer by pipetting melted agarose (2% low-melt agarose, Sigma) onto their surfaces. Each electrode was plugged into a female crimp-terminal, which was attached to a micromanipulator (Narishige, NMN-21). The other end of the female crimp-terminal (RS Components) was soldered to a cable that terminated with a male crimp, which was connected to the voltage-clamp amplifier (Triton+, Tecella LLC) via an electrode probe holder (Terrapin, Tecella LLC). The current signal was obtained by an episodic acquisition routine (0 mV, 50 mV, 0 mV, −50 mV, 0 mV, in 5 s intervals) with a feedback resistor of 1 GΩ. Data were acquired at 20 kHz with a 5 kHz filter through the ‘TecellaLab v0.90 type 2’ software. The data was in Tecella’s tlc binary file type and analysed and displayed by using custom software written in LabVIEW31 (link).
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