semipermeable membrane
Biology
Chemistry
(noun)
One that will allow certain molecules or ions to pass through it by diffusion.
Examples of semipermeable membrane in the following topics:
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Osmosis
- Osmosis is the movement of water through a semipermeable membrane according to the concentration gradient of water across the membrane, which is inversely proportional to the concentration of solutes.
- Semipermeable membranes, also termed selectively permeable membranes or partially permeable membranes, allow certain molecules or ions to pass through by diffusion.
- While diffusion transports materials across membranes and within cells, osmosis transports only water across a membrane.
- The semipermeable membrane limits the diffusion of solutes in the water.
- Imagine a beaker with a semipermeable membrane separating the two sides or halves.
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Osmotic Pressure
- Osmotic pressure is the pressure which must be applied to a solution to prevent the inward flow of water across a semipermeable membrane.
- Osmotic pressure is the pressure which needs to be applied to a solution to prevent the inward flow of water across a semipermeable membrane.
- It is also defined as the minimum pressure needed to nullify osmosis.The phenomenon of osmotic pressure arises from the tendency of a pure solvent to move through a semi-permeable membrane and into a solution containing a solute to which the membrane is impermeable.
- As a result, when a cell is placed in a hypotonic solution, water rushes into the membrane, increasing its volume.
- Eventually, the cell's membrane is enlarged such that it pushes against the cell's rigid wall.
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Osmotic Pressure
- Osmosis is defined as the net flow or movement of solvent molecules through a semipermeable membrane through which solute molecules cannot pass.
- If a solution consisting of both solute and solvent molecules is placed on one side of a membrane and pure solvent is placed on the other side, there is a net flow of solvent into the solution side of the membrane.
- Osmotic pressure is the pressure that needs to be applied to a solution to prevent the inward flow of water across a semipermeable membrane.
- One way to stop osmosis is to increase the hydrostatic pressure on the solution side of the membrane; this ultimately squeezes the solvent molecules closer together, increasing their "escaping tendency."
- The pure water is trying to dilute the solution by travelling through the semipermeable membrane.
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Selective Permeability
- Plasma membranes are asymmetric: the interior of the membrane is not identical to the exterior of the membrane.
- On the interior of the membrane, some proteins serve to anchor the membrane to fibers of the cytoskeleton.
- Polar substances present problems for the membrane.
- This interactive shows that smaller molecules have an easier time making it across a semipermeable membrane.
- The exterior surface of the plasma membrane is not identical to the interior surface of the same membrane.
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Biological and Medical Applications
- Another important form of fluid movement is osmosis—the transport of water through a semipermeable membrane (shown in ) from a region of high concentration to a region of low concentration.
- Similarly, dialysis is the transport of any other molecule through a semipermeable membrane due to its concentration difference.
- A semipermeable membrane with small pores that allow only small molecules to pass through.
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Molecular Transport Phenomena
- Diffusion through membranes is an important method of transport.
- Membranes are generally selectively permeable, or semipermeable.
- In other types of membranes, the molecules may actually dissolve in the membrane or react with molecules in the membrane while moving across.
- Similarly, dialysis is the transport of any other molecule through a semipermeable membrane due to its concentration difference.
- (a) Two sugar-water solutions of different concentrations, separated by a semipermeable membrane that passes water but not sugar.
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Dialysis
- Dialysis works on the principles of the diffusion of solutes and ultrafiltration of fluid across a semi-permeable membrane.
- Blood flows by one side of a semi-permeable membrane, and a dialysate, or special dialysis fluid, flows by the opposite side.
- A semipermeable membrane is a thin layer of material that contains holes of various sizes, or pores.
- Smaller solutes and fluid pass through the membrane, but the membrane blocks the passage of larger substances (for example, red blood cells, large proteins).
- Hemodialysis removes wastes and water by circulating blood outside the body through an external filter, called a dialyzer, that contains a semipermeable membrane.
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Nerve Conduction and Electrocardiograms
- The cell membrane is semipermeable, meaning that some ions may cross it while others cannot.
- How does it get transmitted along the cell membrane as a nerve impulse?
- The adjacent membrane depolarizes, affecting the membrane farther down, and so on.
- The semipermeable membrane of a cell has different concentrations of ions inside and out.
- The membrane is normally impermeable to Na+.
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The Plasma Membrane and the Cytoplasm
- Despite differences in structure and function, all living cells in multicellular organisms have a surrounding plasma membrane (also known as the cell membrane).
- Cholesterol, also present, contributes to the fluidity of the membrane.
- This structure causes the membrane to be selectively permeable.
- Osmosis is the diffusion of water through a semipermeable membrane down its concentration gradient.
- Explain the structure and purpose of the plasma membrane of a cell
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Electric Potential in Human
- In humans, they are seen in cell membranes and nerve impulses in particular.
- Cell membranes are only semipermeable; water can freely travel in and out, but ions can be selectively admitted passage across them.
- Potentials can change as ions move across the cell membrane.
- This can occur passively, as ions diffuse through ion channels in the membrane.
- Active transport of ions across a cell membrane is also a possibility.