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Effect Of Osmosis On Potato

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Discussion:
Effects of Osmosis on Potato Cell:
In the first experiment of the Osmosis and Potato Lab, two slices of potatoes were used to analyze how the extracellular fluid of a cell membrane effects the net movement of free water molecules in and out of the cell. The first potato slice was used as the control, while the other potato slice was sprinkled with salt, after leaving both slice to set for 10 minutes, the potato slices with the salt was more dry and shriveled than the control. In this situation, the potato slice with the salt outside of the selectively permeable membrane created a hypertonic environment meaning that the free water molecule concentration inside the cell is greater than the outside of the cell membrane. This causes …show more content…

By not putting any solutes onto the potato, we created an isotonic environment for the potato cell meaning that the levels of free water molecules are the same inside and out and no movement of water will occur. For the second part of the experiment, our group hypothesized that the less diluted solutions will cause the most change in weight percentage of the potato slices. In this experiment, my group tested six different solution concentration of sucrose, we started with a 0M centration then increased it by .2M concentration until we reached to 1M. Looking at the graph, the 0M and 0.2M concentration of sucrose caused the potato slice to gain in percent weight change. For the potato to gain weight means that the solution was hypotonic and that there was a higher concentration of free water molecules in the extracellular fluid than there was inside the potato cell (Reece, 2014, pg 132). Each time the solution concentration increased for Sucrose the percent weight of the potato decreased, these results proved that the group’s hypothesis was right. We also saw this same trend with sodium chloride and glucose as well, however, sodium chloride caused the fastest decrease in weight change percentage out of the three solutes; this is because salt is water soluble and dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions causing it to have two times more solutes …show more content…

This is important because it shows how the cell membrane permits molecules from entering and leaving the cell based on its size, polarity, and electric charge. In a cell, substances will diffusion down a concentration gradient meaning that it will move from a high concentrated area to a low concentrated area until there is an equilibrium (Reece, 2014, pg 131). Small non-polar molecules such as oxygen or carbon dioxide will diffuse through the cell membrane while polar molecules such as water and sugar will have difficulty passing through without the help of transport proteins. The cell membrane also permits ionic molecules and proteins from passing through the membrane without the help of energy or transport mechanism. My group hypothesized that solutes that are small and nonpolar will diffuse through the artificial membrane. To test this hypothesis our group placed Albumin, Glucose, Fructose, Lactose, Maltose, Starch, NaCl, and MgCl into eight separate dialysis tubes and soaked them in D.I. water to see if the solutes will pass through. After soaking them for about an hour, we took the D.I. water and tested them using the biuret, benedict, IKI, silver nitrate, and sodium fluoride test. If the solution of the water changes color it means that the solute had diffused through the artificial membrane. For albumin and starch they both

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