Diffusion and Osmosis Flashcards

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1
Q

What are factors that affect the rate of diffusion

A
  • concentration gradient
  • length of diffusion pathway
  • temperature
  • surface area to volume ratio
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2
Q

What is diffusion?

A

the net movement of molecules/ions from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration (until they are evenly distributed)

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3
Q

What is facilitated diffusion?

A

diffusion that only occurs in specific protein channels or carrier proteins

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4
Q

Explain why facilitated diffusion is a passive process?

A

There is no ATP from respiration used in the process, the only energy used is the built-in (kinetic) energy of the molecules themselves

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5
Q

What is osmosis?

A

the movement of water from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential through a selectively permeable membrane

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6
Q

What is meant by the term ‘water potential’?

A

a measure of the pressure caused by water molecules, and the likelihood of them moving

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7
Q
A
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7
Q

What is the water potential of pure water (at standard conditions)?

A

0 kPa

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8
Q

What happens to water potential if a solute is added?

A

It decreases

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9
Q

What happens if the water potential outside of an animal cell increases too much?

A

the cell will gain water by osmosis and will eventually burst

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10
Q

What is a selectively permeable membrane?

A

a membrane that is permeable to water molecules (and few other smaller molecules) but not to larger molecules

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11
Q

How might a cell be adapted to increase the rate of osmosis?

A

Larger surface area would increase the rate of osmosis

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12
Q

Explain how K+ ions are involved in the opening and closing of stomata

A
  • K+ ion concentration in guard cells increases
  • lowers water potential inside guard cell
  • water moves from higher water potential into the lower water potential outside of the cell, by osmosis
  • cells become turgid and change shape, opening the stomata
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13
Q

What substances are transported across membranes by facilitated diffusion?

A

larger molecules, water soluble molecules, polar molecules

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14
Q

What substances are transported across membranes by simple diffusion?

A

small molecules, non-polar molecules, lipid soluble molecules

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15
Q

How and why do hydrophobic compounds enter through cell membranes?

A

lipid soluble so can cross the phospholipid bi-layer

16
Q

Describe the difference between carrier and channel proteins?

A

carrier- when a molecule binds a conformational change occurs
channel- hydrophilic channels that open to allow specific ions to diffuse through