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Moving Materials into and out of the Cell • Cells need to receive materials: • • • • water nutrients oxygen for the mitochondria carbon dioxide for chloroplasts • Cells need to dispose of materials • • • carbon dioxide from the mitochondria other wastes resulting from cellular metabolism excess water ( especially cells that live in fresh water) • There are two ways in which cells receive and dispose of materials: • Passive transport • Active transport • Passive transport: • does not require an input of energy • Active transport: • requires an input of energy • There are two kinds of passive transport: • diffusion • osmosis • Diffusion: the random movement of molecules from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration • Basically molecules tend to move from where they are more crowded to where they are less crowded. They do this because of their own kinetic energy and random movement. • Osmosis: the diffusion of water through a membrane • Osmosis is just a special kind of diffusion. Like regular diffusion, the water molecules tend to move from where they are more crowded to where they are less crowded. It has a special name because of the importance of water to living cells. • In order to understand diffusion and osmosis, it is necessary to understand solutions. • Solution: a type of mixture in which one or more substances are dissolved in another substance • Examples of solutions • salt water • pancake syrup • cola • air • A solution includes at least one solvent and at least one solute. Salt water is a solution, in which salt is the solute and water is the solvent. • Solute: the dissolved substance • Solvent: the substance in which the solute is dissolved • Solution: the solvent plus the solute • The solvent and the solute are not chemically bonded to each other. The solvent and solute each have their own molecules which can be separated without using any chemical reactions. • Cells placed in solutions: • If a cell is placed in a solution, the solution may be hypertonic, hypotonic, or isotonic to the cell. • Hypertonic Solutions • If the solution is hypertonic to the cell, there is a higher percentage of solute in the solution than in the cell. • This also means that there is a higher percentage of water in the cell than there is in the solution. • Notice that the water(solvent) is the opposite of the solute. If you have more dissolved stuff, you have less water and vice versa. • So ......, if you place a cell such as an egg in a hypertonic solution, will water go out of the egg or into the egg? • Hypotonic Solutions: • If the solution is hypotonic to a cell such as an egg, it means that there is a lower percentage of solute in the solution than there is in the egg. • This means that there is a higher percentage of water in the solution than in the egg. • So ....., will more water move into the egg or out of the egg? • Isotonic Solutions: • If a cell is placed in an isotonic solution, the percentage of solute outside the cell is the same as the percentage of solute inside the cell. • This means that the percentage of water(solvent) is also the same on the inside as the outside. • So ....., if you place an egg in an isotonic solution and check the mass the next day, what result could you expect? • Identify each of the following as hypertonic, hypotonic, or isotonic to the egg: • Vinegar: • Pancake syrup: • Distilled water: • www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYNwynwa ALo