Molecules that are not polar or ion molecules. That is because they won't be stopped by the hydrophobic tails and they will have the acknowledgement to pass through the cell membrane thanks to little resistance. This makes those molecules have an advantage.
oxygen
oxygen and carbon dioxide.
oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water
Non-polar molecules, small polar molecules, and gases like oxygen and carbon dioxide can pass through the lipid bilayer passively due to its semi-permeable nature. These molecules can easily diffuse through the hydrophobic core of the membrane.
Glucose cannot pass through a phospholipid bilayer by simple diffusion.
No
Yes, polar molecules can pass through the phospholipid bilayer through facilitated diffusion or active transport.
The molecule that will not pass through the phospholipid bilayer of a membrane is a large and polar molecule.
oxygen
Carbon.water molecules,glucose molecules can pass through lipid bilayer by simple diffusion
oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Small, non-polar molecules like oxygen and carbon dioxide can pass through the phospholipid bilayer easily. Larger or charged molecules may need special transport proteins to help them cross.
Yes, hydrophobic molecules can pass through a membrane because the lipid bilayer of the membrane is also hydrophobic, allowing them to move through easily.
Yes, nonpolar molecules can cross the lipid bilayer because the lipid bilayer is made up of nonpolar molecules itself, allowing nonpolar molecules to pass through easily.
they are lipid soluble and pass through the bilayer
oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water
Yes, oxygen molecules are small and nonpolar, allowing them to pass directly through the phospholipid bilayer of cells by simple diffusion. This is one of the reasons why oxygen can easily enter and exit cells to support cellular respiration.