It gets waterlogged. Really?
The cell explodes!
No because for electrolysis to take place, an electrolyte or ions like table salt ( NaCl ) is needed. But in distilled water there are no ions or electrolytes. Hence electrolysis cannot take place in distilled water. - Dumnledore
Those animal cells placed in pure water will swell but plant cells are restricted by their cells walls. If place in a solution high in sugar (or even salt), both cells will shrink in a process called crenation (shriveling).
This is a mixture of concentrated hydrochloric acid and anhydrous zinc chloride (which acts as a catalyst). To prepare, mix 136.29 g of anhydrous zinc chloride (ZnCl2) with 105 g of concentrated hydrochloric acid (HCl). Place beaker in an ice bath, due to the exothermic reaction. Stir with a glass rod until all ZnCl2 is dissolved.
Yes, provided there is oxygen dissolved, which will be the case if the distilled water is open to the air, a rusting reaction will take place. It will be slow. The reaction is much quicker when there are dissolved salts.
To prepare a stock solution of Leishman stain, mix the Leishman stain powder with a suitable solvent like methanol or ethanol to make a concentrated solution. Filter the solution to remove any undissolved particles. Store the solution in a dark and cool place, away from light and heat.
Water moves from an area of higher water concentration (dilute solution) to an area of lower water concentration (concentrated solution) in osmosis. This movement occurs across a semi-permeable membrane.
because distilled water does not have any dissolved salts in it
I Dont Know, Why are you asking me?
As you know,distilled water is a kind of hypotonic solution which means it comprises more water.If you place an animal cell into an hypotonic solution,the cell swells and finally becomes burst because of not having a rigid cell wall.Nevertheless,if you place a plant cell an hypotonic solution,it can resist the osmotic pressure due to having a rigid cell wall.As,cell wall serves turgor pressure,it assists cell not to swell and burst
The cell explodes!
When HCl is added to sodium thiosulfate, a redox reaction takes place, resulting in the formation of solid sulfur (S) and sodium chloride (NaCl) in solution. Additionally, the reaction produces sulfur dioxide gas (SO2) and water (H2O) as byproducts.
You can place a piece of potato in a concentrated salt solution. Endosmosis will occur as water moves into the potato cells due to the higher concentration of solutes outside the cells. Conversely, placing the potato in distilled water will result in exosmosis, as water moves out of the cells to dilute the higher concentration of solutes inside the cells.
Add 50 mL of HCl 1 N in a 1 L volumetric flask, class A or B; add ca. 900 mL distilled water to the flask. Place the flask in a thermostat at 20 0C. After 30 min add slowly distilled water to the mark (1 L) and stir well the closed flask. Pour the solution in a bottle. Place a label with the date, concentration, name of the solution on the bottle.
When a potato is placed in a concentrated sugar solution, water will move out of the potato cells via osmosis, resulting in the potato shrinking and becoming soft and limp. This is because the sugar solution has a higher solute concentration than the potato cells, causing water to move from an area of higher water concentration (inside the potato) to an area of lower water concentration (the sugar solution).
If a cucumber is placed in distilled water, the water molecules will flow into the cell by osmosis. This happens because the distilled water solution has a lower osmotic pressure than the cucumber cell.
No because for electrolysis to take place, an electrolyte or ions like table salt ( NaCl ) is needed. But in distilled water there are no ions or electrolytes. Hence electrolysis cannot take place in distilled water. - Dumnledore