D2.3 Water Potential Flashcards

1
Q

what is the most important factor in how well solutes dissolve

A

solvent polarity

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2
Q

What is solvation

A

the interaction of a solvent with molecules and ions that dissolve in it

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3
Q

what is osmosis

A

the net movement of water molecules from a less concentrated solution to a region of more concentration across a selectively permeable membrane

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4
Q

what is a hypotonic solution

A

when the external solution is less concentrated than the cell cytoplasm and there is a net inflow of water into the cell

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5
Q

what is a hypertonic solution

A

external solution more concentrated than the cell and there is net outflow of water

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6
Q

what is an isotonic solution

A

external solution has same concentration as the cell cytoplasm and there is no entry of exit of water

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7
Q

what is osmotic concentration

A

the measure of a solute concentration

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8
Q

what is standard error

A

the estimate of the reliability of the mean of a population sample

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9
Q

what happens when animal cells are placed in a hypotonic solution

A

they will swell and break open from the pressure generated due to excessive amounts of water

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10
Q

what happens when animal cells are placed in a hypertonic solution

A

they shrink in size and become crenated which can lead to blood clots

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10
Q

what is osmoregulation

A

the active regulation of the osmotic pressure of an organisms body fluids

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10
Q

what happens when plant cells are placed in hypotonic solution

A

the cytoplasm presses against the cell wall, increasing turgor pressure
the cell becomes turgid

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11
Q

how do unicellular organisms live in hypotonic solutions

A

due to the constant inflow of water, they have a contractile vacoule which works to pump out the excess water

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12
Q

what happens when plant cells are placed in a hypertonic solution

A

the volume of the cell solution decreases and cytoplasm pulls away from the cell wall
the cell becomes flaccid and is said to be plasmolysed

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13
Q

what are the features and uses of an Intravenous Drip

A

IV drip used to treat dehydration and deliver medicine
is isotonic so that cells aren’t damaged

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14
Q

how are organs transported

A

in Isotonic solutions

15
Q

what is water potential

A

the potential energy of water per unit volume, relative to pure water
denoted by symbol psi and units kPa

16
Q

what does it mean when a solution has a high water potential

A

the water will have a high potential energy for movement

17
Q

in terms of water movement, what happens when solutions contain a solute

A

the water forms hydrogen bonds with the solute, restricting the movement of water

18
Q

where is the highest water potential found

A

in pure water, generally taken to be zero

19
Q

How does pressure affect the movement of water

A

higher pressure within the cell can result in greate potential energy

20
Q

how can water potential be calculated

A

solute potential plus pressure potential

21
Q

in terms of water/pressure potential, what happens to a cell placed in a hypotonic solution

A

water goes in, causing pressure potential to increase
solute concentration decreases
water potential increases

22
Q

in terms of water/pressure potential, what happens to a cell placed in a hypertonic solution

A

water goes out, pressure potential decreases
solute concentration increases
water potential decreases