Question about osmosis and osmotic pressure

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    Osmosis Pressure
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Osmosis involves the movement of solvent from an area of lower solute concentration to an area of higher solute concentration through a selectively permeable membrane. This process aims to equalize solute concentrations on both sides of the membrane. The initial misunderstanding was regarding the direction of solvent movement, which is not from high to low solute concentration, but rather the opposite. Clarification emphasized that the solvent moves to dilute the more concentrated solution, not to increase the disparity. Understanding this principle is crucial for accurately discussing osmotic pressure in chemistry.
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Hey

Was making up some chem notes (mid semester study break, thought id better actually do some) and came across osmosis. Now my understanding of this is that you have two solutions separated by a membrane that let's the solvent pass but not the solute. What i don't get is why the solvent goes from high concentration (of solute i assume) to low, surely that actually increases and furthere unequalises the concentration instead of restoring it?

Cheers
-G
 
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FunkyDwarf said:
Hey

Was making up some chem notes (mid semester study break, thought id better actually do some) and came across osmosis. Now my understanding of this is that you have two solutions separated by a membrane that let's the solvent pass but not the solute. What i don't get is why the solvent goes from high concentration (of solute i assume)

Wrong assumption. Since there are only two possible assumptions --- would you like to guess again?

to low, surely that actually increases and furthere unequalises the concentration instead of restoring it?

Cheers
-G
 
ok so youre saying in terms of the concentration of the solvent it moves from high to low and thus vice versa for solute?
 
"... and thus vice versa ..." Use that on an exam, and expect to get gigged more often than not; that statement suggests that solute moves. Go ahead and write it out, "Solvent moves from the solution with lower solute concentration through the membrane to the solution with higher solute concentration."
 
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