Diffusion, facilitated diffusion and osmosis Flashcards

1
Q

What is transported by a diffusion?

A

Some non-polar molecules can directly pass through the membrane. E.g. O2, CO2,

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2
Q

Factors affecting the rate of diffusion:

A
  • the gradient
  • temperature
  • the surface area
  • the nature of the molecule
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3
Q

Large molecules require…

A

more energy to get them moving across the membrane.

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4
Q

Non-polar molecules such as…

A

alcohol and hormones, diffuse much more easily than polar ones. This is because they are soluble in non-polar phospholipid tails.

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5
Q

Large polar molecules such as…

A

glucose and amino acid cannot diffuse through the phospholipid molecules. They can pass only with a help of transport proteins.

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6
Q

Facilitated diffusion is…

A

diffusion of substances through transport proteins in the cell surface membrane. Provide hydrophilic areas that allow the molecules or ions to pass through the membrane.

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7
Q

Osmosis is…

A

a special type of diffusion involving water molecules only

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8
Q

What can be the highest water potential?

A

0

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9
Q

Water potential is the tendency…

A

of water to move.

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10
Q

Water potential depends on:

A
  • how much water the solution contains in relation to solutes
  • how much pressure is being applied
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11
Q

Water always moves from high water to…

A

low water potential.

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12
Q

The solute potential decreases with…

A

higher concentration of solutes.

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13
Q

A decrease in solute potential causes…

A

a decrease in water potential.

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14
Q

Pressure potential is the contribution…

A

of pressure to water potential and solute potential.

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15
Q

Increasing pressure potential…

A

increases the water potential.

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16
Q

Osmosis in animal cells:

A
  • cells do not contain cell wall

- if the water potential is not equal to the water potential in the cell, the cell would either shrink or burst

17
Q

Plant cells are surrounded by…

A

cell wall, which is strong and rigid.

18
Q

The cell wall pushes against expanding…

A

protoplast, so the pressure builds up.

19
Q

Expanding protoplast increases…

A

the water potential until the water potential is equal in and outside of the cell. (Fully rigid)

20
Q

Plasmolysis is the process…

A

of shrinking protoplast when plant cells become plasmolysed.

21
Q

Incipient plasmolysis is the point…

A

at which pressure potential just reached 0 and plasmolysis is about to occur.