Normally red blood cells look like flat disk, witch is compressed in the center. So that they have more surface area when they get exposed to oxygenated air from alveoli and secondly they can get folded, when they squeeze through capillaries, witch are smaller than the size of red blood cells. When we put them in the distilled water, they will get swollen, like a boll, as water will enter the cells due to higher oncotic (osmotic, you can say) pressure inside the cells.
If a white blood cell is placed in distilled water, water will enter the cell through osmosis. This will cause the cell to swell and eventually burst, leading to its destruction. The process is known as lysis.
The distilled water is a hypotonic environment.
I think its osmosis because the water potential in the distilled water is higher than in the red blood cell. Henceforth, water would move into the cell by osmosis. But, I don't think the cell will be diluted because it will swell and eventually haemolysis will occur.
If distilled water is hypotonic to a red blood cell, water will move into the cell through osmosis, causing the cell to swell and potentially burst (lyse) due to the increased pressure inside the cell. Red blood cells do not have a cell wall to protect them from changes in osmotic pressure, so they are particularly susceptible to lysis in hypotonic solutions.
The swelling and bursting of a red blood cell placed in distilled water is a physical change. This is because the cell's structure is altered due to the osmotic pressure causing water to move into the cell, leading to swelling and ultimately bursting. No new substances are formed in this process.
If a white blood cell is placed in distilled water, water will enter the cell through osmosis. This will cause the cell to swell and eventually burst, leading to its destruction. The process is known as lysis.
3. water from the blood cell into its environment
The distilled water is a hypotonic environment.
I think its osmosis because the water potential in the distilled water is higher than in the red blood cell. Henceforth, water would move into the cell by osmosis. But, I don't think the cell will be diluted because it will swell and eventually haemolysis will occur.
If distilled water is hypotonic to a red blood cell, water will move into the cell through osmosis, causing the cell to swell and potentially burst (lyse) due to the increased pressure inside the cell. Red blood cells do not have a cell wall to protect them from changes in osmotic pressure, so they are particularly susceptible to lysis in hypotonic solutions.
The swelling and bursting of a red blood cell placed in distilled water is a physical change. This is because the cell's structure is altered due to the osmotic pressure causing water to move into the cell, leading to swelling and ultimately bursting. No new substances are formed in this process.
yes with distilled water
In a leaf mesophyll cell placed in distilled water, water will move into the cell through osmosis. This is because the cell has a higher solute concentration than the distilled water, creating a concentration gradient that drives the movement of water into the cell.
because of osmosis it would get fatter and fatter with water till it burst. aww.
Your question is confusing, did you mean "distilled" water? Your body & cells live and function not in a pure water environment, but water with several electrolytes in specific concentrations: sodium, potassium, calcium, chloride and several others. If you placed red blood cells into pure water (distilled water) that did not have any of the electrolytes mentioned above, the distilled water would enter the blood cells through the process of osmosis. The basic idea of osmosis is that if there is a chemical gradient and a permeable membrane separating this gradient, there will be a transfer of water trying to reach an equillibrium. The solution in your red blood cells would be hyperosmotic compared to the distilled water. The cell membranes are semi-permeable, and would allow some of the distilled water to enter the cell, trying to balance the osmolarity. The effect would be that the red blood cells would swell with distilled water and likely burst--like an over-filled water balloon. If enough red blood cells were to pop, they could release enough electrolytes into the distilled water to keep other red blood cells from swelling and popping.
The red blood cell would undergo hemolysis, or bursting, as water would enter the cell due to osmosis. The high concentration of water outside the cell compared to inside would cause the cell to swell and eventually burst.
A red blood cell placed in water will lyse or burst. The red blood cell is hypertonic in comparison to the pure water (hypotonic). Water will rush in to equalize the concentrations via osmosis, and the cell will lyse.