In this scenario, the glucose in sac 1 will diffuse out of the sac into the distilled water due to the concentration gradient. However, since distilled water is hypotonic compared to the 40% glucose solution, water molecules will also move into the sac via osmosis to try to balance the concentration inside and outside the sac. This will cause the sac to swell as water moves in, reaching an equilibrium point where the movement of glucose and water is balanced.
Yes, glucose can move into the cell through facilitated diffusion using glucose transport proteins on the cell membrane. The concentration gradient allows for passive transport of glucose molecules into the cell.
To find the percent of glucose in the solution, use the formula: [ \text{Percent of glucose} = \left( \frac{\text{mass of glucose}}{\text{mass of solution}} \right) \times 100 ] The mass of the solution is the sum of the mass of glucose and the mass of water: ( 4.6 , \text{g} + 145.2 , \text{g} = 149.8 , \text{g} ). Thus, [ \text{Percent of glucose} = \left( \frac{4.6}{149.8} \right) \times 100 \approx 3.07% ] So, the percent of glucose in the solution is approximately 3.07%.
how many grams of glucose must be added to 525g of 2.5 percent leg mass glucose solution?and give the furmela?
No,5percent glucose is an isotonic solution. 0.9 percent is for NaCl.
The glucose was able to go through the sac. The glucose went from high concentration to low concentration. The glucose is permeable.
In this scenario, the glucose in sac 1 will diffuse out of the sac into the distilled water due to the concentration gradient. However, since distilled water is hypotonic compared to the 40% glucose solution, water molecules will also move into the sac via osmosis to try to balance the concentration inside and outside the sac. This will cause the sac to swell as water moves in, reaching an equilibrium point where the movement of glucose and water is balanced.
Yes, glucose can move into the cell through facilitated diffusion using glucose transport proteins on the cell membrane. The concentration gradient allows for passive transport of glucose molecules into the cell.
suspended in a solution with the following composition: 10% NaCl, 10% glucose and 40% albumin.
Dissolve 10 g pure glucose in 100 mL distilled water.
10 percent NaCl in distilled water is equivalent to 100 g/L NaCl.
Fifty Percent - 2006 SUSPENDED was released on: USA: 2006
To prepare a 10% glucose solution, you would mix 10 grams of glucose with enough water to make a total solution volume of 100 ml. This means the final solution would contain 10 grams of glucose and 90 ml of water.
120liters
120
80 liters
25 Percent - 2005 V SUSPENDED is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG-13