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Q: What happens to dialysis tubing after soaking it in water?
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Why is dialysis tubing not submerged in pure water?

The tubing is permeable; itallows water to pass through the tube wall.


To Which substances was the dialysis tubing permeable?

I don't know unless you give more details!


Why does glucose diffuse through dialysis tubing into distilled water?

Glucose diffuses through dialysis tubing into the distilled water as, glucose molecules are small, it could fit through the pores of the dialysis tube. It is also because glucose is hydrophillic, (polar compound), which will dissolve in water as it is a polar compound as well.


Why did osmosis, but not diffusion of sucrose molecules, occur across the dialysis membrane containing 20% sucrose solution?

Sucrose cannot diffuse across a dialysis tubing. This is because it's size is too large to go through the tubing. Water can diffuse across.


How can you tell if osmosis occurred in dialysis tubing?

Osmosis is usually detected by simply looking at the experiment - most of the time, enough water is transferred to cause a noticeable rise/fall in water levels. However, I assume you could tell through the usage of weighing scales - as water re-distributes, as would the weight.


What is the components of blood that cannot pass the dialysis tuning?

First of all, it is called Dialysis Tubing. Secondly, they are not 'Components', they are 'Contents'. Thirdly, only small molecules can pass through the semi-permeable membrane of the tubing, if using Diffusion. If using Osmosis, only water can pass through.


What physical property of the dialysis tubing might explain its differential permeability?

Dialysis tubing is an impermeable membrane/containment vessel that is stratified with microscopic holes which restrict certain molecules or particles from diffusing through them. This leads dialysis tubing to serve as a selectively permeable membrane because it selectively prevents certain molecules from crossing the membrane based on the size of the molecules. (Typically water and glucose will diffuse through, whereas starch and potassium iodide will not.


Can iodine pass through dialysis tubing?

As starch is something which the body wishes to hold onto, the nephrons in the kidney have small pores which stop larger particles like starch and also blood cells from escaping, while water and salts do. For this reason, the dialysis machine works in the same way.


A dialysis bag is filled with distilled water and then placed in a sucrose solution?

Distilled water will move out of the dialysis bag and into the sucrose solution due to osmosis and the fact that the dialysis bag has a hypertonic solution of H2O as compared to the sucrose solution.


Can glucose pass through a membrane?

Dialysis membranes are typically not permeable to sucrose. Removing sugar from the blood can be dangerous as it can lead to hypoglycemia. Sugar molecules are too large to pass through dialysis membranes.


What does dialysis tubing represent in your model?

Dialysis Tubing is a type of semi or partially permeable membrane tubing made from regenerated cellulose or cellophane. It is used for diffusion, or more accurately osmosis. It allows the passage of small molecules but not larger ones. It is used in clinical circumstances to ensure a filtered flow of molecules, preventing the flow of larger solute molecules. Small molecules can be 'washed' out of a solution which is pumped through the tubing into a solvent, usually water, which surrounds it and in which they can be flushed away.


What will happen when starch is mixed with solutions?

In this scenario, the concentration of solutes (the glucose and starch) is higher inside of the dialysis tubing than it is outside. As such, water will diffuse (via osmosis) into the dialysis tubing causing it to swell.