Meaning Substrate
What does Substrate mean? Here you find 98 meanings of the word Substrate. You can also add a definition of Substrate yourself

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Substrate


[L. substratus, strewn under] (1) The substance on which an enzyme works. (2) The foundation to which an organism is attached.
Source: phschool.com

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Substrate


A part or substance that lies beneath and supports another.
Source: nachi.org

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Substrate


Any surface or material on which printing is done.
Source: printindustry.com

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Substrate


1810, from Modern Latin substratum (see substratum).
Source: etymonline.com

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Substrate


substance acted upon by an enzyme in a chemical reaction.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Substrate


base of hard material on which a non-moving organism grows. Also called substratum.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Substrate


"Supporting surface" on which an organism grows. The substrate may simply provide structural support, or may provide water and nutrients. A substrate may be inorganic, such as rock or soil, [..]
Source: ucmp.berkeley.edu

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Substrate


See Medium or Media.
Source: maximumyield.com (offline)

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Substrate


The layer of material that serves as a base for a two–dimensional work, such as paper in prints and drawings and board, paper panel, and canvas in painting.
Source: nga.gov.au

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Substrate


A substrate is the medium in which a chemical reaction takes place or the reagent in a reaction that provides a surface for absorption. In biochemistry, an enzyme substrate is the substance the enzyme [..]
Source: chemistry.about.com

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Substrate


The base-in biology, the base for plant to grow on; in chemistry element that acts like enzyme. It binds particularly to the enzyme's active site where it lowers the energy needed for the reactio [..]
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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Substrate


substance on which an enzyme acts (pop)
Source: users.ugent.be

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Substrate


surface on which a cell or organism grows or is attached such as the use of microcarriers in cell culture; most eukaryotic cell types require attachment to a substrate for survival; also called extrac [..]
Source: aiche.org

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Substrate


The base layer of something. In the case of a chip, usually the lowest layer and the grounding layer. The substrate does not by definition have to be conductive, but usually is.
Source: csgnetwork.com (offline)

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Substrate


The base material used to carry out or support an image, for example, paper or film.
Source: www-rohan.sdsu.edu (offline)

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Substrate


Term for any surface to be printed to which ink will adhere.
Source: malanenewman.com (offline)

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Substrate


A smooth surface used beneath floor covering - such as concrete, underlayment, or existing resilient flooring.
Source: armstrong.com (offline)

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Substrate


The surface on or in which animals such as mussels or clams, live or gram; the material that is used to build a nest.
Source: conservewildlifenj.org

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Substrate


A part or substance which lies below and supports another.
Source: proofrock.com (offline)

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Substrate


The body or base layer of an integrated circuit, onto which other layers are deposited to form the circuit. The substrate is usually silicon, although sapphire is used for certain applications, particularly military, where radiation resistance is important. The substrate is originally part of the wafer from which the die is cut. It is used as the e [..]
Source: semiconductors.org (offline)

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Substrate


a molecule used as a starting product which binds to the active site of an enzyme and is converted into one or more products.
Source: biomerieux.com

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Substrate


A molecule that is acted upon, and chemically changed, by an enzyme.
Source: xray.bmc.uu.se

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Substrate


reactant of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction
Source: ontrack-media.net

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Substrate


A base material to which other materials or fabrication procedures are applied.
Source: ltisg.com

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Substrate


See Enzyme System
Source: brendan.com (offline)

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Substrate


The physical material upon which a photovoltaic cell is made.
Source: solar-electric.com

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Substrate


Any surface to which a coating is applied.
Source: consolidatedcoating.com

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Substrate


The surface to which graphics are applied. Can be plastics, metals, vinyls, banners, fabrics, papers, glass and many more.
Source: sign-age.com

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Substrate


The material out of which the face is made. Wood, metal sheeting, paper and acrylic are some examples of sign substrates.
Source: sign-age.com

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Substrate


This is a prepared material on to which another finish or coating is to be applied.
Source: steelbb.com

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Substrate


(n) the substance that is acted upon by an enzyme or ferment(n) a surface on which an organism grows or is attached(n) any stratum or layer lying underneath another(n) an indigenous language that cont [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Substrate


the surface or medium on which an organism lives or grows.
Source: dosits.org (offline)

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Substrate


A surface on which something grows or is attached. As in "barnacles grow on hard substrates." The bottoms of aquatic systems are also characterized as having kinds of substrates, such as roc [..]
Source: animaldiversity.org

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Substrate


 Any surface on which printing is done. 
Source: printing.ucr.edu (offline)

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Substrate


The parent or base material to which the coating is applied.
Source: poeton.co.uk (offline)

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Substrate


Molecule that undergoes a change in a reaction catalyzed by an enzyme.
Source: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

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Substrate


Any surface on which printing is done.
Source: e-printing.co.uk (offline)

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Substrate


Any material upon which a thermal-spray deposit is applied.
Source: praxairdirect.com

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Substrate


Sometimes called aquarium gravel. Placed on the bottom of an aquarium, substrate can be purely decorative or functional. Decorative substrate is inert, causing little or no chemical/biological reactions while functional substrate contains minerals that influence water parameters such as pH and alkalinity.
Source: liveaquaria.com (offline)

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Substrate


Layer of metal underlying a coating, regardless of whether the layer is basis metal.
Source: nde-ed.org

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Substrate


a material upon the surface of which an adhesive containing substance is spread for any purpose, such as bonding or coating. A broader term than adherend. (See also adherend)
Source: valpac.com

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Substrate


The process for installing a ceramic floor begins with the preparation of the tile foundation, or what's called the substrate. Common materials used as tile substrates in home installations inclu [..]
Source: arizonatile.com

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Substrate


The process for installing a ceramic floor begins with the preparation of the tile foundation, or what’s called the substrate
Source: americantileandstone.com (offline)

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Substrate


The uncoated/unpainted body panel surface.
Source: collision.honda.com (offline)

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Substrate


Illustrated Glossary of Organic Chemistry Substrate: The starting material (other than enzyme or coenzyme) for an enzymatic chemical reaction. Sometimes the term also means the entity that is attacked [..]
Source: web.chem.ucla.edu

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Substrate


the underlayment for the ceramic tile installation.
Source: ceramictileworksmn.com (offline)

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Substrate


The type of bottom or material on or in which an organism lives.
Source: buzzardsbay.org

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Substrate


Any material that receives an image. Substrates can be soft materials like fabrics and vinyls, or harder surfaces like Sintra, glass, or foamcore. The substrate is whatever 'receives' the design or image.
Source: ghimaging.com (offline)

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Substrate


a reactant in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction.
Source: lpi.oregonstate.edu

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Substrate


Crk-associated substrate was originally identified as a highly phosphorylated 130 kDa protein that associates with Oncogene Protein crk and Oncogene Protein src. It is a signal transducing adaptor pro [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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Substrate


Any material that supports another material that is bonded over it, such as backer board for bathroom tile.
Source: rustoleum.com

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Substrate


the type of material on the seabed
Source: genustraithandbook.org.uk (offline)

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Substrate


Ground covering such as newsprint, sand, peat moss, potting soil, wood shavings, or cypress mulch that are used to cover the bottom of cages for animals such as rodents or reptiles.
Source: merckvetmanual.com

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Substrate


A film to which subsequent layers or coatings are added.
Source: petfilm.com

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Substrate


A language which is socially less prestigious than another spoken in the same area but which can nonetheless be the source for grammatical or phonological features in the more prestigious language. Su [..]
Source: uni-due.de

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Substrate


The substance upon which an enzyme acts.
Source: winning-homebrew.com

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Substrate


Material acted on by an enzyme.
Source: winning-homebrew.com

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Substrate


¡@ a chemical substance acted on by an enzyme. the material forming the growth medium for a microorganism; cf. substratum. The substance or object on which an organism lives and from which it gets nou [..]
Source: 140.112.183.1

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Substrate


, a substance which is acted on by an enzyme (T-B); the material such as fecal matter or leaf parts upon which certain ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) raise fungi (T-B).
Source: antbase.org

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Substrate


The material that an organism lives upon, for example, stones to which barnacles are attached.
Source: worldoceanreview.com

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Substrate


Any combination of materials that provide support, water retention, aeration, or nutrient retention for plant growth. In this instance, substrate is compost into which mushroom spawn is distribute [..]
Source: calrecycle.ca.gov

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Substrate


Surface on which an organism lives.
Source: mesa.edu.au

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Substrate


The molecule on which an enzyme acts.
Source: deerlandenzymes.com

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Substrate


The base on which an organism lives. The soil is the substrate of most seed plants; rocks, soil, water, or other plants or animals are substrates for other organisms. Chemical used by an organism to s [..]
Source: owp.csus.edu

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Substrate


the substance on which an enzyme acts.
Source: di.uq.edu.au (offline)

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Substrate


The surface or material that an organism lives on or in. For example, oyster reefs provide hard substrate for invertebrates to attach themselves to.
Source: chesapeakebay.net

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Substrate


A molecule acted upon by an enzyme.
Source: dddmag.com (offline)

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Substrate


A layer of material or substance below the surface. The substrate may refer to the backing system to which pile yarns are attached or inserted. Generally, the term substrate refers to sub flooring mat [..]
Source: bdma.org.uk

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Substrate


For light emitting diodes, the material on which the devices are constructed.
Source: lrc.rpi.edu (offline)

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Substrate


the substance acted upon by an enzyme or a fermenter, such as yeast, mold, or bacteria.
Source: wef.org (offline)

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Substrate


A substrate is any surface to which a sealing or coating has been applied, or the underlying layer of a material.
Source: kingfield-electronics.co.uk (offline)

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Substrate


A molecule acted upon by an enzyme.
Source: emice.nci.nih.gov (offline)

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Substrate


carrier material, e.g. glass, plastic foil or metal foil
Source: oes-net.de (offline)

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Substrate


a term meaning, generally, a surface to which something adheres, the base material to be printed on, or the surface to which a pressure sensitive decal is adhered. In particular, any surface on which screen printing is applied. surface water
Source: aquatechnologies.com (offline)

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Substrate


The surface to which an organism is attached or upon which it moves. The material on which a microorganism grows. The particular substance or group of substances that an enzyme activates.
Source: web.deu.edu.tr

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Substrate


The material on which an image is printed, usually paper but can be any substance for which a method of adhering ink can be achieved.
Source: luminous-landscape.com

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Substrate


a material which is the base for the basic surface of a painting.
Source: koh-i-noor.cz

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Substrate


(base) the surface that the tesserae are adhered to. ex. wood, metal, glass.
Source: mosaicartsource.com

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Substrate


A support upon which other marks or actions are taken. In a work on paper, paper is the substrate. If it gets mounted to wood then wood becomes the substrate.
Source: ronpokrasso.com (offline)

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Substrate


Material such as paper or plastic, generally in sheet or web form.
Source: jkpaper.com

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Substrate


any surface on which a plant or animal lives or on which a material sticks
Source: montereybay.noaa.gov

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Substrate


The supporting material upon or within which the elements of a microcircuit or integrated circuit are fabricated or attached. Mounting surface for integrated circuits. May be semiconductor or insulato [..]
Source: interfacebus.com

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Substrate


A chemical substance that takes part in a chemical reaction catalyzed by an enzyme.
Source: iatp.org

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Substrate


(biochemistry) What an enzyme acts upon. (biology) A surface on which an organism grows, or to which an organism or an item is attached. ''The rock surface of a rockpool is the substrate for a s [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Substrate

Source: stopafib.org

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Substrate


A surface onto which a layer of another substance is applied. In automotive catalysts the substrate is the honeycomb structure, which enhances the surface area, on which the catalytic solution is deposited. In photovoltaics, semiconductors such as germanium are used as substrates, on which the rest of the solar cell layers are deposited.
Source: annualreport.umicore.com (offline)

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Substrate


A molecule that is acted upon by an enzyme.
Source: cfgd.cochrane.org

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Substrate


Substrate may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


Substrate may refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


Substrate is used in a converting process such as printing or coating to generally describe the base material onto which, e.g. images, will be printed. Base materials may include: plastic films or f [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


Stream substrate (sediment) is the material that rests at the bottom of a stream. There are several classification guides. One is: Mud – silt and clay. Sand – Particles between 0.06 and 2 mm in diame [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


The substrate of an aquarium refers to the material used on the tank bottom. It can affect water chemistry, filtration, and the well-being of the aquarium's inhabitants, and is also an important part [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


In biology, a substrate is the surface on which an organism (such as a plant, fungus, or animal) lives. A substrate can include biotic or abiotic materials and animals. For example, encrusting algae t [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


In chemistry, a substrate is typically the chemical species being observed in a chemical reaction, which reacts with a reagent to generate a product. In synthetic and organic chemistry, the substrate [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


The substrate of a vivarium refers to the material used on the floor of the enclosure. It can affect humidity levels, filtration as well as the well being of the inhabitants. The appropriate substrate [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


The word substrate comes from the Latin sub - stratum meaning 'the level below' and refers to any material existing or extracted from beneath the topsoil, including sand, chalk and clay. The term i [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


A substrate (also called a wafer) is a solid (usually planar) substance onto which a layer of another substance is applied, and to which that second substance adheres. In solid-state electronics, this [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Substrate


A substrate (also called a wafer) is a solid (usually planar) substance onto which a layer of another substance is applied, and to which that second substance adheres. In solid-state electronics, this [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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