Oxygen Supply for Single-Celled Organisms: Diffusion vs. Osmosis Explained

  • Thread starter Thread starter Barclay
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Diffusion Osmosis
AI Thread Summary
Oxygen required by single-celled organisms is obtained through diffusion rather than osmosis. While osmosis specifically refers to the movement of water or solvent molecules across a semi-permeable membrane, diffusion encompasses the movement of all types of molecules, including oxygen. The confusion arises from the presence of a membrane, but diffusion applies to gases and solutes, while osmosis is limited to solvent movement. Therefore, oxygen crosses the cell membrane via diffusion. This distinction clarifies the process by which single-celled organisms acquire oxygen.
Barclay
Messages
207
Reaction score
1

Homework Statement


Is the oxygen required by the single-celled organisms obtained by diffusion or osmosis through the surface membrane of the cell?

Homework Equations



The Attempt at a Solution


I'm thinking osmosis since there's a membrane through which the oxygen passes. But I've been looking at definitions of osmosis and some talk of osmosis is only to do with water moving from high to low concentration. Diffusion is about any molecule moving anywhere.

Bit confused. Please advise. Thank you
 
Physics news on Phys.org
You are right
Diffusion is in all states of substances
Osmosis is usually confined to solutions ;)
 
The book I'm reading said oxygen required by the single-celled organisms diffuses across the surface membrane of the cell? I wasn't convinced that was accurate because there's a membrane involved so must be osmosis. But definitions I read about osmosis talk only of osmosis of water across a membrane. But I'm talking of oxygen (not water) so it :
"osmosis of oxygen (NOTE : no need to mention the word membrane because it is assumed a membrane exists in osmosis)" or "diffusion of oxygen across a membrane".
 
Osmosis is a term that refers exclusively to the diffusion of solvent molecules (in most cases, water) across a semi-permeable membrane. The spontaneous crossing of all other substances across a membrane would be referred to as diffusion.
 
Ygggdrasil said:
Osmosis is a term that refers exclusively to the diffusion of solvent molecules (in most cases, water) across a semi-permeable membrane. The spontaneous crossing of all other substances across a membrane would be referred to as diffusion.

Thanks. Thats cleared by confusion. Osmosis is the diffusion of the liquid molecules across a membrane (in the body it would be water but in chemistry could be anything e.g an alcohol) in which the substrate (in this case oxygen) is dissolved. The substrate diffuses across the membrane
 
Thread 'Confusion regarding a chemical kinetics problem'
TL;DR Summary: cannot find out error in solution proposed. [![question with rate laws][1]][1] Now the rate law for the reaction (i.e reaction rate) can be written as: $$ R= k[N_2O_5] $$ my main question is, WHAT is this reaction equal to? what I mean here is, whether $$k[N_2O_5]= -d[N_2O_5]/dt$$ or is it $$k[N_2O_5]= -1/2 \frac{d}{dt} [N_2O_5] $$ ? The latter seems to be more apt, as the reaction rate must be -1/2 (disappearance rate of N2O5), which adheres to the stoichiometry of the...
I don't get how to argue it. i can prove: evolution is the ability to adapt, whether it's progression or regression from some point of view, so if evolution is not constant then animal generations couldn`t stay alive for a big amount of time because when climate is changing this generations die. but they dont. so evolution is constant. but its not an argument, right? how to fing arguments when i only prove it.. analytically, i guess it called that (this is indirectly related to biology, im...
Back
Top