Diffusion: Alveoli
Diffusion: Alveoli
Diffusion: Alveoli
Dissolved or gaseous substances have to pass through the cell membrane to get
into or out of a cell. Diffusion is one of the processes that allow this to happen.
Diffusion occurs when particles spread. They move from a region where they are in
high concentration to a region where they are in low concentration. Diffusion
happens when the particles are free to move. This is true in gases and for particles
dissolved in solutions - but diffusion does not occur in solids.
Products of digestion, dissolved in water, can pass across the wall of the small
intestine by diffusion. Their concentration is higher in the small intestine than their
concentration in the blood, so there is a concentration gradient from the intestine to
the blood.
Oxygen and carbon dioxide, dissolved in water, are exchanged by diffusion in the
lungs:
oxygen moves down a concentration gradient from the air in the alveoli to
the blood
carbon dioxide moves down a concentration gradient from the blood to the
air in the alveoli
The dissolved substances will only continue to diffuse while there is a concentration
gradient.
Gas exchange in the lungs happening in the alveoli
Osmosis
When the concentration is the same on both sides of the membrane, the movement
of water molecules will be the same in both directions. At this point, the net
exchange of water is zero and there is no further change in the liquid levels.
Osmosis in cells
Plant cells
Plant cells have a strong cellulose cell wall on the outside of the cell membrane.
This supports the cell and stops it bursting when it gains water by osmosis.
Animal cells
Animal cells do not have a cell wall. They change size and shape when put into
solutions that are at a different concentration to the cell contents.
gain water, swell and burst in a more dilute solution (this is called
haemolysis)
These things do not happen inside the body. Osmoregulation involving the kidneys
ensures that the concentration of the blood stays about the same as the
concentration of the cell contents.
Active transport
Sometimes dissolved molecules are at a higher concentration inside the cell than
outside, but, because the organism needs these molecules, they still have to be
absorbed. Carrier proteins pick up specific molecules and take them through the
cell membrane against the concentration gradient.
Examples of active transport include:
uptake of glucose by epithelial cells in the villi of the small intestine
uptake of ions from soil water by root hair cells in plants
Active
Diffusion Osmosis
transport
Down a
concentration
gradient
Against a
concentration
gradient
Energy needed
Partially
Gases and
permeable Carrier protein
Notes dissolved gases
membrane needed
also diffuse
needed