MEMBRANE PERMEABILITY. PERMEABILITY The membrane must allow water molecules to diffuse through. It is permeable to water. If a concentrated solution is.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Movement of Substances
Advertisements

Transport in living things
Plasma Membrane.
Substances cross the cell membrane without the cell expending energy
OSMOSIS Eve Oram.
How can we smell our dinner being made in the room next door? diffusion diffusion diffusion.
Unit 6 Cell Transport Part 1.
Chapter 3 Diffusion and Osmosis.
Topic 2 Diffusion and Osmosis
Cytology Osmosis and Water relations. is the tendency of gaseous or aqueous particles to spread from a more concentrated region to a less concentrated.
Cell Transport The movement of molecules can be either passive (no energy) or active (needs energy) depending upon the membrane structure and concentration.
Diffusion.
Cell Environment Lab 5.
Diffusion and Osmosis.
Movement in and out of cells
Osmosis.
Diffusion, Osmosis, Active Transport
7-3 Cell Transport.
HOMEOSTASIS AND TRANSPORT
Cells and Their Environment
Cellular Transport.
How were you able to smell the perfume?. Movement of Substances Diffusion Osmosis.
LESSONS 2-3: Movement of Substances Across Membranes By the end of these lessons you should be able to: Define diffusion, osmosis and active transport.
CH 5 - P HOMEOSTASIS AND CELL TRANSPORT. OBJECTIVES 1. Explain how an equilibrium is established as a result of diffusion. 2. Distinguish between.
Cell Membrane & Cellular Transport Biology 1. HOMEOSTASIS AND TRANSPORT Cell membranes help organisms maintain homeostasis by controlling what substances.
CELLULAR TRANSPORT. PASSIVE AND ACTIVE TRANSPORT REVIEW Doesn’t require energy inputs Solutes diffuse through a channel inside the protein’s interior.
7-3 Cell Boundaries Photo Credit: © Quest/Science Photo Library/Photo Researchers, Inc.
Cellular Transport.
TRANSPORT THROUGH CELL MEMBRANES Diffusion and Osmosis.
Cell Membrane & Cellular Transport. HOMEOSTASIS AND TRANSPORT Cell membranes help organisms maintain homeostasis by controlling what substances may enter.
Cellular Transport Unit 5. Passive Transport  Does not use energy 1. Diffusion Movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area.
Movement of Substances Chapter 3. Movement of SubstancesDiffusionOsmosisActive Transport Learning Objectives... DIFFUSION define diffusion discuss its.
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Honors Biology.  Activities of a cell depend on materials that enter and leave it  To stay alive a cell must exchange materials (food, oxygen, waste)
Cellular Transport 8.1 Notes. I. Plasma Membrane maintains homeostasis in the cell Controls the passage of materials into and out of the cell.
Section Objectives Explain how the processes of diffusion, passive transport, and active transport occur and why they are important to cells.
How do cells move things in and out of the cell?? Cell Transport Methods 1.Passive Transport —Diffusion, Osmosis and Facillatated Diffusion 2.Active Transport---
Diffusion and Osmosis. Passive Transport Passive transport- movement of molecules across a cell membrane without energy input Refresh: Solute Object being.
OSMOSIS and DIFFUSION. Molecules are always moving Molecules move randomly and bump into each other and other barriers.
Outline for revision DIFFUSION, OSMOSIS, ACTIVE TRANSPORT.
How do cells maintain balance? Cells need to maintain a balance by controlling material that move in & out of the cell HOMEOSTASIS.
Passive transport - Does NOT need energy (diffusion, facilitated diffusion, osmosis)
You should be able to: Define osmosis & diffusion. Determine why do we need to regulate osmosis. Identify what controls osmosis. Distinguish between a.
1 Movement of materials in and out of cells Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport.
Osmosis: the diffusion of water molecules through a selectively permeable membrane. Water moves from high to low concentration. Is the membrane permeable.
Cell Transport. Diffusion The cytoplasm is a “solution” of many substances in water. Concentration=mass/volume Diffusion is the process by which molecules.
Passive Transport: Diffusion and Osmosis Chapter 7; ; Pgs Objective: I can correctly predict which molecules will go where, based on permeability.
Transport of Materials
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Movement of Substances
Cellular Transport.
Diffusion Most common type of passive transport.
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Cell Membranes Osmosis and Diffusion
Transport in plants Grade 8 biology.
Cells and Their Environment
Cell Transport 7.3.
Movement In and Out of Cells
Passive Transport.
CELL TRANSPORT.
The Permeability of the Plasma Membrane
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Passive Transport (7-3 part I)
OSMOSIS and DIFFUSION.
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Movement Across the Membrane
Osmosis, Diffusion, Active Transport
Cell Processes.
Substances cross the cell membrane without the cell expending energy
Chapter 3: Exchanging Materials with the Environment
Presentation transcript:

MEMBRANE PERMEABILITY

PERMEABILITY The membrane must allow water molecules to diffuse through. It is permeable to water. If a concentrated solution is separated from a dilute solution by a suitable membrane, water will pass from the dilute to the concentrated solution. In fact, water passes both ways but faster from the dilute to the concentrated solution.

The membrane allows only molecules of a certain size to diffuse through it, it is called selectively permeable. The cell membrane functions as a selectively permeable membrane. The cell sap and cytoplasm function as fairly concentrated solutions.

In a plant cell, the cell membrane acts as a selectively permeable membrane The cell wall is freely permeable to water The vacuole contains a solution of salts and sugars If there is water outside the cell, it will diffuse by osmosis into the vacuole The vacuole will expand, pushing the cytoplasm outwards against the cell wall

Most common type of passive transport. Diffusion – is the random movement of particles (atoms, ions, molecules) from a region of high concentration to low concentration, down a concentration gradient. Molecules diffuse down a concentration gradient. Diffusion stops when molecules dispersed evenly (with no concentration gradient), and a state of equilibrium is reached. Diffusion

Process of diffusion Dissolved substance diffuse throughout liquid in which they are dissolved.

Diffusion is important for: Gaseous exchange (oxygen, carbon dioxide) during respiration and photosynthesis Excreting waste products e.g. ammonia, water, mineral salts Absorption of digested food into blood through walls of small intestine. Enables animals to detect food by smell. Why is diffusion important?

Osmosis A form of passive transport process Osmosis – diffusion/movement of water molecules across a selectively permeable membrane from a region of higher water concentration to a region of lower water concentration. A partially/selectively permeable membrane only allows certain molecules to pass through it but not others. What is the difference between diffusion and osmosis?

Osmosis is the net movement of water molecules across a Partially-permeable membrane. Water molecules move randomly with a certain amount of kinetic energy…

Distilled water separated by a partially- permeable membrane: Water molecules are moving from one side of the membrane to the other but there is no net osmosis

If a substance is dissolved in water, the kinetic energy of the water molecules is lowered. This is because some water molecules aggregate on the surfaces of the other molecules…

Osmosis demonstration

The osmotic potential of a cell is known as its WATER POTENTIAL. For animal cells, the water potential is the osmotic potential of the cytoplasm.

Osmosis and Plant cells In plant cells, cell sap contains dissolved salts and sugar. If cell sap has lower water potential than that of surrounding solution, water enters by osmosis. Plant cell will swell and become firm / turgid. Plant cell walls prevent cells from bursting. Turgor pressure - outward pressure which cell sap exerts against inside wall of cell. Turgor helps to support soft tissues in plants

Osmosis and Plant cells If cell sap has higher water potential than surrounding solution, water moves out of the vacuole and cytoplasm shrinks away from the cell wall. Cell loses its turgor, shrinks and becomes flaccid or soft. The cell becomes plasmolysed. Plasmolysis - shrinkage of cytoplasm away from the cell wall when plant cells are immersed in a solution of low water potential. Plasmolysis causes land plants to wilt, in non-woody parts of plants e.g. leaves, shoots

Hypotonic - Dilute solution A ( higher water potential) compared to concentrated sugar solution B ( lower water potential) Hypertonic - Solution B has water potential compared to solution A Isotonic - when both solutions have the same water potential (‘iso’: same as; ‘tonicity’: strength of solution). Dilute vs Concentrated solutions AB

Osmosis in plant and animal cells

Osmosis and Plant cells

Plasmolysis Plasmolysis is the loss of water from the cell by osmosis,and this is evident when the cell contents pull away from the rigid cell wall as the water moves out.

Steps of Plasmolysis

Wilting due to loss of water!!

THANK YOU