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DIFFUSION AND OSMOSIS 3.4
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KEY CONCEPT Materials move across membranes because of concentration differences.
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Molecules can move across the cell membrane through passive transport. Passive transport does not require energy input from a cell There are two types of passive transport 1.Diffusion 2.Osmosis Diffusion and Osmosis
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Diffusion is the movement of molecules in a fluid or gas from high concentration to low concentration Molecules diffuse down a concentration gradient. “Move downhill” or from high to low Diffusion
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Diffusion stops when dynamic equilibrium (spread evenly, but molecules still moving) is reached Diffusion
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Concentration Number of molecules in a substance in a given volume Concentration gradient Difference in concentration from one area to another Diffusion
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Diffusion plays a key role in cells ability to move substances into and out of the cell Small lipids and nonpolar molecules like O 2 and CO 2 diffuse easily Cells continually consume O 2 Therefore the concentration of O 2 is almost always higher outside the cell Result O 2 diffuses into cell without the need of energy
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Osmosis is the diffusion of water molecules across a semipermeable membrane from high water molecule concentration to low H 2 0 concentration. Continues until dynamic equilibrium is reached Osmosis
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Homeostasis Biological Balance Key concept of selectively permeable membrane and osmosis is to maintain homeostasis! Osmosis
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Tonicity A measure of water pressure against a semipermeable membrane Three types of Tonicity 1. Isotonic Concentration of solute is equal inside and outside of cell
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Cell in Isotonic Solution CELL 10% NaCl 90% H 2 O 10% NaCl 90% H 2 O What is the direction of water movement? The cell is at _______________.equilibrium ENVIRONMENT NO NET MOVEMENT
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2. Hypertonic The concentration of solute is greater outside the cell Plasmolysis – The process by which the cell shrinks from losing water Osmosis
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Cell in Hypertonic Solution CELL 15% NaCl 85% H 2 O 5% NaCL 95% H 2 O What is the direction of water movement? ENVIRONMENT
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3. Hypotonic The concentration of solute is greater inside the cell Cytolysis – The process by which a cell bursts from water entering Turgor pressure – Pressure exerted on the cell wall of plants due to water pushing out Osmosis
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Cell in Hypotonic Solution CELL 10% NaCl 90% H 2 O 20% NaCl 80% H 2 O What is the direction of water movement?
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Osmosis Some single celled organisms and animals are adapted to survive hypotonic solutions They have structures (cell wall and vacuole) to store or remove (contractile vacuole) excess water
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Practice Draw arrows to indicate the direction of water movement into cell, out of cell, or both! The 10% solution represents a cell
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Tonicity and osmosis Video
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Facilitated Diffusion Some molecules cannot easily diffuse across the cell membrane. A transport or carrier protein provides a door for a substance to enter the cell. Square peg in a round hole idea! Still No energy is used Some Molecules diffuse through transport proteins
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