5.5 Osmosis Flashcards

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1
Q

Define osmosis

A

Osmosis is the net movement of water molecules from an area of high concentration to an are of low concentration through a selectively permeable membrane down a water potential gradient, a PASSIVE PROCESS

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2
Q

What is water potential?

A

Water potential is the pressure exerted by free water molecules as they collide with a membrane or a container, measure in pascals

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3
Q

What is the water potential for pure water and thus how do others relate ?

A

Water potential for pure water is 0 kpa, and anything more concentrated than water will have less , thus negative kpa

The more negative the water potential the more concentrated the solution

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4
Q

Why does water potential decrease as solute is added?

A
  • Water molecules are likely to aggregate around the solute
  • meaning the kinetic energy of water is lowered and the amount of FREE WATER MOLECULES is now decreased
  • meaning overall a less pressure is exterted than pure
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5
Q

What is hydrostatic pressure?

A

When water moves into a CLOSED SYSTEM LIKE A CELL, this results in an increase of inside pressure, and this is known as hydrostatic pressure. Now if this gets too high it can cause damage

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6
Q

What happens if an animal cell is out into a less negative steer potential solution, HYPOTONIC ?
What’s the problem with animal size of membranes

A

Water will move into the cell via osmosis, increasing the HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE
- as animal cells membranes are very thin, only 7nm, and have NO CELL WALLS, the cells will eventually burst= CYTOLYSIS, cannot return

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7
Q

What happens if animal placed in solution more negative, hypertonic solution?

A

Here water will move out by osmosis from the cytoplasm, leading to a reduction in the volume of the cell, leading to shrivel and shrinking known as cremation

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8
Q

Istonic solution

A

= the same

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9
Q

What is different for plant cells vs animal cells when it comes to osmosis

A

Plant cells cannot control the gradients around them unlike animal cells can, for example root cells will ALWAYS HAVE WATER AROUND THEM
- also plant cells have cellulose walls around them

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10
Q

What happens when plant cell placed in less negative, hypotonic solution ?
What is tugor pressure and WHAT IT DOES?

A
  • water moves in by osmosis
  • hydrostatic pressure increases, pushing cell membrane to cell walls
  • the new pressure AGAINST THE CELL WALLS IS CALLED TUGOR PRESSURE
    • tugor pressure increasing will RESIST further movement of water from entering
  • at this state you say the cell is now TURGID
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11
Q

What happens when plant placed in solution more negative than it, hypertonic?

A

Water moves out of the cell into the solution via osmosis

  • reduction of volume in cytoplasm
  • eventually pulls the cell surface membrane away from the cell as the contents collapse
  • this is known as the cell to be PLASMOLYSED
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12
Q

What happens when you put plant cel, in isotonic solution

A

Water potential is same so no water moves in or out

- thus as it is not at MAXIMUM PRESSURE IT TECHNICALLY IS FLACCID

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