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Diffusion Osmosis Lab

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Page 1: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Diffusion Osmosis Lab

Page 2: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Osmosis• Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a

region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential through a partially permeable membrane. Osmosis is considered in terms of water potential and solute potential.

Page 3: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water Potential• Water potential = a measure of the kinetic

energy of water molecules. Here, water molecules are constantly moving in a random fashion. Some of them collide with cell membrane, cell wall, creating a pressure on its known as water potential.

• The higher their kinetic energy the more they move and hit the membrane, therefore higher the water potential

Page 4: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water potential

Why does water move?How does water move?

1.

2.

3.

Downhill

Fresh – salty

Hose, straw

4. Sponge

Pressure potential

Osmotic/solute potential

Matric potential

Page 5: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Components of Water Potential

1. Pressure potential: pushing (positive pressure, like the hose)

sucking (negative pressure, like a straw) Major factor moving water through plants

2. Osmotic, or Solute potential: reduction in water potential due to the presence of dissolved solutes

Dissolved substances dilute pure water, so

salty water has lower water potential (lower concentration) than pure water

Page 6: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water Potential• Unit of measurement: megapascals (Mpa)

1 MegaPascal = 10 atm = 145.1 psi

• Water potential for pure water: 0

• Anything that lowers the “free energy”of water lowers it potential.

-dissolved solutes

Page 7: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water potential = pressure potential + solute potential

Page 8: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Clarifying Water Potential Values

• (2) Factors to consider:

p = pressure potential (outside & inside)

s = solute potential

system = p + s

SO……

p results in “+” value

p results in “-” value

Page 9: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water Potential Values• High water potential (+Value):

- less solute

- more water

- (hypotonic)

• Zero (0) Value:

- Pure water

• Low water potential (-Value):

- More solute

- less water

- (hypertonic)

****Water will move across a membrane in the direction of the lower water potential****

Page 10: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Analysis of the Data Collected

• Mass Difference: Final – initial (absolute diff.)

• % Change in Mass: Final – initial x 100

initial

**Why do we use the % change in mass instead of simply the straight difference?

• Plot your data on the graph.

• Determine the molar solute concentration of the potato cores. How???

***Where your line crosses the “0” mark

Page 11: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Calculating Solute Potential

• Variables involved: i, C, R, T

i = ionization constant: NaCl = 2.0 (Na+ & Cl-)

**for sucrose it will be 1.0 (it doesn’t ionize)

C = Molar concentration of your potato (graph)

R= rate constant: 0.0821 L · atm (bar)

mol · K

T = Temperature: K

Page 12: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Calculating the Solute Potential

(s) s = - iCRT• Sample Calc.

A 1.0 M sugar solution @ 22° C under standard atmospheric conditions:

s = -(1)(1.0mol)(0.0821 L · bar )(295K)

L mol · K

s = -24.22 bars

Page 13: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Typical Water Potential Values

• Outside air (50% humidity): -100 MPa• Outside air (90% humidity): -13 MPa• Leaf Tissue: -1.5 MPa• Stem: -0.7 MPa• Root: -0.4 MPa• Soil water: -0.1 MPa• Hydrated soil (Saturated) +2 - +5 MPa

** When the soil is extremely dry what happens to the water potential and water movement into the plant?

**Does the value become more negative or more positive?

Page 14: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water Potential in Plants

Page 15: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Water Balance (pg. 117-118)• Osmoregulation~ control

of water balance

• Hypertonic~ higher concentration of solutes

• Hypotonic~ lower concentration of solutes

• Isotonic~ equal concentrations of solutes

• Cells with Walls:• Turgid (very firm)

• Flaccid (limp)

• Plasmolysis~ plasma membrane pulls away from cell wall

Page 16: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Dialysis Tubing Experiment

Page 17: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

An Artificial CellPermeable to: monosaccharides & water

Impermeable to: Disaccharides

Page 18: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Introductory Questions #3 (Lab)1) Suppose you have an artificial cell that was permeable to

monosaccharides and impermeable to disaccharides. What would happen to the cell if it had 0.80 M maltose and 0.85 M fructose in it and was placed in a solution containing 0.45 M glucose, 0.65 M fructose, and 0.40 M sucrose. a) Which direction would the water flow? b) Which area has a higher water potential?c) What would happen to the concentration of the maltose inside the cell (increase, decrease, remain the same)?

2) What is the ionization constant (i) for sucrose?3) Determine the “C” value for your potato cores. (guidesheets)4) Graph your results:

% change in mass vs. sucrose molarity within the beakers(guidesheets)

Page 19: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Key Sections you need for your Lab

• Title• Intro/Background: Defining water potential

Importance & Sig. Of the lab• Hypothesis & reason for your prediction• ID Experimental Variables• Materials (diagram & visual of set up optional)• Procedure• Data: tables charts & graphs• Analysis- be thorough• Conclusion & Evaluation: error & improvements

Page 20: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Introductory Questions # (lab)

1) Explain how potential energy is different from kinetic energy. What are some ways we can measure energy?

2) Define each variable in the equation: ∆G = ∆H – T ∆S

3) What is the difference between an exergonic reaction and an endergonic reaction?

4) How is ATP associated with coupled reactions? What purpose does it serve?

5) How is an electron carried from one molecule to the next? Name a molecule that can carry an electron.

6) How is Anabolism different from catabolism? 7) Briefly explain how the first two laws of thermodynamics

apply to a living organism

Page 21: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Lab #3: Water Potential & Osmosis

• Read the Handout provided• Go to my web site and click on:

“Review of 12 AP Labs” • Click on the hyperlink shown on the

worksheet• Choose Lab #1: Diffusion & Osmosis• Go through the tutorial and READ each

section.

Page 22: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

What to have Ready for Tomorrow• Bring in a Large Potato (one per lab table)• Have the Pre-lab finished w/quiz• Write a statement of purpose or reason for doing this

lab• Materials list - review the handout• Hypothesis: • Data Table – review website or others for an idea.

**Need (2): Individual data & class Data

Page 23: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Introductory Questions #3 (Lab)1) Suppose you have an artificial cell that was permeable to

monosaccharides and impermeable to disaccharides. What would happen to the cell if it had 0.80 M maltose and 0.85 M fructose in it and was placed in a solution containing 0.45 M glucose, 0.65 M fructose, and 0.40 M sucrose. a) Which direction would the water flow? b) Which area has a higher water potential?c) What would happen to the concentration of the maltose inside the cell (increase, decrease, remain the same)?

2) What is the ionization constant (i) for sucrose?3) Determine the “C” value for your potato cores. (guidesheets)4) Graph your results:

% change in mass vs. sucrose molarity within the beakers(guidesheets)

Page 24: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Questions to answer from the Website- Prelab

• How many concepts are there?

• How many Exercises are there for

designing the experiment?

• After looking at the Analysis & Results portion of tutorial define each of following terms: i =

C= R = T=

• Do the 5 question quiz and print out your results.

Page 25: Diffusion Osmosis Lab. Osmosis Osmosis = the movement of water molecules from a region of higher water potential to a region of lower water potential

Answers for the Website- Prelab• How many concepts are there? 8• How many Exercises are there for designing the experiment? 5• After looking at the Analysis & Results portion of tutorial define

each of following terms:i = ionization constantC= molar concentration of the potatoR= rate constant: 0.0821 L · atm (bar)

mol · KT= temperature (K) 273 + C

• Do the 5 question quiz and print out your results. 1. C 2. D 3. E 4. B 5. A