Invasion Objective My primary objective in this experiment was to investigate whether infiltration occurred in potatoes and how it affects potatoes in different molar concentrations of sucrose and aqueous solution. Instrument stopwatch 18 Test tube 3 Test tube rack Potato potato knife scales Heat resistance pad ruler Paper towel 50 ml Female cylinder Sucrose solution prediction. Invasion is the conversion of water molecules from a weaker solution to a stronger solution through a semipermeable membrane.
This paper is to educate people about more knowledge of penetration; so they can identify it and evaluate it at home appliances and discuss the pros and cons of penetration. A common use of penetration is purified water. This is accomplished by pushing through the sub-permeable membrane through the domain's water pressure and permeating it. The penetration is when the solvent of the low concentration solute solution migrates through the membrane and reaches a higher concentration solution and thereby weakens.
Author, Jason Mulligan, Nicola Morale, Jeffrey Chen, Reagan Gallagher Penetration Egg Laboratory penetration is the main reason for this laboratory. Invasion refers to the movement of water molecules from high to low concentration. Hypotonicity, hypertonicity and isotonicity are the type of solution (infiltration condition). Hypotonicity means that there is more water outside the cell than water in the cell. This activates penetration and pours water into the cells. Then, due to water pressure, this causes the battery to expand. Hypertonic solution refers to intracellular water more than water outside the cell. This activates the osmotic action and allows water to exit the cell. This will cause the cells to wither (if the cell walls are likely to be distant from the cell wall), the density decreases. Isotonic solution refers to the same concentration of water in the cell and outside the cell; balance. This will not change the cell size. Materials of interest • 1 egg
Permeate permeated through the permeated plant cells after permeation is transferred from cells in water to cells by permeation. Cell membranes of plant cells are selectively permeable. Therefore, when a cell containing a weak solution (a large amount of water) is close to a cell with a strong solution (a small amount of water), water moves from a weak solution to a strong solution as shown in the figure. Conclusion The viscous tube is a selective permeable membrane. This means that it will only allow some particles to pass through it. In this experiment, glucose particles are too big, so only water particles can pass through. The concentration of glucose particles in the viscous tube bag is high and only the water particles can move completely freely so that water particles from the outside of the bag enter it and make the concentration uniform. This is due to popularization. Therefore, as more water particles enter the viscous tube pocket, the liquid level rises in the capillary.