The higher the temperature the faster diffusion occurs which in turn means that the process of osmosis becomes faster as the temperature rises.
Osmosis is the passage of moisture through various plant surfaces so a high temperature will increase the speed of osmosis.
The higher the temperature the faster diffusion occurs which in turn means that the process of osmosis becomes faster as the temperature rises.
Theoretically, the maximum point of increase in the rate of osmosis with the increase of temperature should be the boiling point of water. At this point, the water can not get hotter (without superheating due to the addition of pressure), therefor the rate of osmosis could not be any greater.Yes, increasing temperature would result in an increase in the rate of osmosis, as the water molecules would have more energy and therefore faster Brownian motion. This means the molecules move around a lot faster, so equilibrium would be reached faster.
I'm not sure about it, but this is my answer:As temperature increases, each process in the universe speeds up. So does osmosis. But: temperature also changes equilibrium. And, it often does so in an unpredictable way. So, you can't say if more water goes out of a cell (or whatever your system is), or on the other hand less water goes out.
as the temperature increases, the rate of osmosis increases
Osmosis is the passage of moisture through various plant surfaces so a high temperature will increase the speed of osmosis.
There would be an increase
The higher the temperature the faster diffusion occurs which in turn means that the process of osmosis becomes faster as the temperature rises.
Theoretically, the maximum point of increase in the rate of osmosis with the increase of temperature should be the boiling point of water. At this point, the water can not get hotter (without superheating due to the addition of pressure), therefor the rate of osmosis could not be any greater.Yes, increasing temperature would result in an increase in the rate of osmosis, as the water molecules would have more energy and therefore faster Brownian motion. This means the molecules move around a lot faster, so equilibrium would be reached faster.
Osmosis is a physical process in which the net flow of solvent is from there higher concentration to their lower concentration. As osmosis is physical process it first increase with increase in temprature but get constant after some extent.
I'm not sure about it, but this is my answer:As temperature increases, each process in the universe speeds up. So does osmosis. But: temperature also changes equilibrium. And, it often does so in an unpredictable way. So, you can't say if more water goes out of a cell (or whatever your system is), or on the other hand less water goes out.
Increasing the temperature increases the kinetic energy of the particles in the state that they are currently in. Increasing the temperature allows water molecules to move about faster and in doing so will increase the rate of osmosis as would increasing the water potential gradient. (Yes)
When temperature increase the volume also increase; but if you think to volumetric titrations the effect is without importance.
temperature
It causes an increase in the Earth's temperature.
surface tension decreases with the increase of temperature
increased precipitation