Reflection coefficient (osmosis)

AI Thread Summary
The reflection coefficient (RC) indicates a membrane's permeability to specific molecules, with values between 0 and 1 suggesting that concentration differences will eventually equalize, eliminating osmotic pressure. A reflection coefficient of 1 signifies a completely impermeable membrane, while 0 indicates high permeability. The discussion highlights that osmotic gradients can be maintained in biological systems through transporter proteins that utilize ATP energy. Additionally, the concept of constrained equilibrium is emphasized, noting that idealizations in thermodynamic models often do not reflect true equilibrium states. Understanding the reflection coefficient is crucial for grasping how osmotic processes function in biological membranes.
majlook
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hello ppl,

i have a question about the reflection coefficient...

since the RC indicates the permeabilty of a membrane for a specific molecule...doesnt that mean (If the RC between 0 and 1) that the concentration of that molecule on both sides of the membrane will become the same after a while ??i mean at first there will be a concentration difference but the molecules will keep diffusing to the lower concentration side of the membrane till the concentrations become the same and thus there won't be any osmotic pressure more...

PLZ HELP
 
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I've forgotten the exact definition of the reflection coefficient, but conceptually, an osmotic jump (for an aqueous solution) is equivalent to a hydrostatic pressure jump. Semipermeable membranes can support on osmotic jump (Donnan equilibrium).
 
majlook said:
PLZ HELP

If helpful I think the answer is, in a word, yes! Unless the reflection coefficient is 1.

The closer it is to 1 the closer thermodynamic equations will be to reality (useful) for short enough times.

If you think about it probably there is a similar idealisation in most or all thermodynamic treatments. The rigid containers of gases and pistons of theory do not allow any gas to escape, and it and the container are certainly not in true equilibrium with the rest of the universe. In the long run your membrane might dissolve or disintegrate. Or in chemical equilibria an equilibrium between A, B, C and D is treated when they could theoretically form thermodynamically more stable E and F, perhaps in millions of years, just their rate for getting there is so slow it can be ignored. Rather than true equilibrium we are always treating a constrained equilibrium involving only certain processes it seems to me, in your case the devices are noticeably less ideal so this is more obvious.
 
thx..that helped a lot :)
 
majlook said:
hello ppl,

i have a question about the reflection coefficient...

since the RC indicates the permeabilty of a membrane for a specific molecule...doesnt that mean (If the RC between 0 and 1) that the concentration of that molecule on both sides of the membrane will become the same after a while ??i mean at first there will be a concentration difference but the molecules will keep diffusing to the lower concentration side of the membrane till the concentrations become the same and thus there won't be any osmotic pressure more...

PLZ HELP

I found the reflection coefficient defined here, and seems to imply how selectively permeable the membrane is:

http://www.anaesthesiamcq.com/FluidBook/fl4_2.php

The reflection coefficient tells you how efficiently an osmotic gradient can be maintained. A reflection coefficient of '1' means the membrane is (selectively) impermeable, while a reflection coefficient of '0' means the membrane is very permeable.

The osmotic gradient across a membrane can be a steady-state condition, and is in fact how biological membranes function. Osmotic gradients are maintained by a variety of transporter proteins that use the free energy of ATP to drive ions against their concentration gradient. Mitochondria perform the reverse: they synthesize ATP using an osmotic gradient (Peter Mitchel''s chemiosmotic theroy)
 
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