The eventual result of diffusion is equilibrium.
The concentrations prior to this point would be uneven. The solutes then diffuse from areas of high solute concentration to areas of low solute concentration. After diffusion, at equilibrium, the concentration will be even in different areas.
The eventual result of diffusion is equilibrium.
The concentrations prior to this point would be uneven. The solutes then diffuse from areas of high solute concentration to areas of low solute concentration. After diffusion, at equilibrium, the concentration will be even in different areas.
The eventual result of diffusion is equilibrium.
The concentrations prior to this point would be uneven. The solutes then diffuse from areas of high solute concentration to areas of low solute concentration. After diffusion, at equilibrium, the concentration will be even in different areas.
No, diffusion does not occur because of random molecular movement. It is rather as a result of movement of molecules from areas of high concentration to lower concentration.
Diffusion depends on where the higher and lower concentrations of solutes are (molecules move from high to low concentration), what kind of membrane (if any) the molecules are moving through, and in many cases how large and charged the molecules are.
The ultimate goal is to produce Proteins and Carbohydrates for the cell and their organelles.
The glucose was able to go through the sac. The glucose went from high concentration to low concentration. The glucose is permeable.
If you are filtering something you are determining what parts liquid or solid can stay and what can go. If you are reabsorbing something that means the product has been produced and will then be brought back into the producer naturally. The difference between the two is the stuff that is filtered is not necessarily always reabsorbed.
the eventual result of cellular deffusion is dynamic equilibrium. - answered by Duncan Lint
the eventual result of cellular deffusion is dynamic equilibrium. - answered by Duncan Lint
No, diffusion does not occur because of random molecular movement. It is rather as a result of movement of molecules from areas of high concentration to lower concentration.
Concentration increases the number of molecules to pass through, hence the result.
The difference between Diffusion and Osmosis is by the process of them diffusing and the outcome such as an example of a sugar cube... In Diffusion Molecules move from high concentration just Osmosis although in the diffusion process of "Diffusion" it uses Kinetic energy and Concentration Gradient while "Osmosis" does not require cells to expand energy, in result Osmosis uses Passive Transport of Water.
Diffusion is the result of a concentration gradient. When there is a higher concentration of a substance on one side of a barrier than on the other side, the molecules move across the barrier to try and establish equilibrium. This process is diffusion. Diffusion of water is specifically called osmosis. While diffusion occurs in living things, equilibrium is never reached. In an organism, equilibrium is the result of death.
Diffusion depends on where the higher and lower concentrations of solutes are (molecules move from high to low concentration), what kind of membrane (if any) the molecules are moving through, and in many cases how large and charged the molecules are.
It triggers diffusion because diffusion is the movement of molecules, therefore as soon as the molecules move diffusion begins to do it's job. It will take them from areas of greater concentration to areas of lesser concentration.
When one area has a higher concentration than another area substances move from the area of high concentration to the area of low concentration.
The ultimate goal is to produce Proteins and Carbohydrates for the cell and their organelles.
They always travel from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration due to the idea of diffusion. Diffusion definition: the net movement of individual particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration due to the random movement of individual particles.
* Diffusion is the movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration as the result of random particular motion. * Osmosis is a special kind of diffusion: it only involves water moving from an area of high water potential to a region of low water potential, through a partially permeable membrane.