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Osmosis and Diffusion
What Is the Difference Between Osmosis and Diffusion?
by Anne Marie
Helmenstine, Ph.D.
Students are often asked to explain the similarities and
differences between osmosis and diffusion or
to compare and contrast the two forms of transport.
To answer the question, you need to know the definitions of
osmosis and diffusion and really understand what they mean.
Osmosis and Diffusion Definitions
Osmosis: Osmosis is the
movement of solvent particles across a semipermeable membrane from a dilute solution
into a concentrated solution. The solvent moves to dilute the concentrated
solution and equalize the concentration on both sides of the membrane.
Diffusion:
Diffusion is the movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to
lower concentration. The overall effect is to equalize concentration throughout
the medium.
Osmosis and Diffusion Examples
Examples of Osmosis: Examples
of osmosis include red blood cells swelling up when exposed to fresh water and
plant root hairs taking up water. To see an easy demonstration of osmosis, soak
gummy candies in water. The gel of the candies acts as a semipermeable
membrane.
Examples of Diffusion: Examples of diffusion include perfume filling a whole room and
the movement of small molecules across a cell membrane. One of the
simplest demonstrations of diffusion is adding a drop of food coloring to
water. Although other transport processes do occur, diffusion is the
key player.
More Examples of Diffusion
1. Perfume is sprayed in one part of a room, yet soon it
diffuses so that you can smell it everywhere.
2. A drop of food coloring diffuses throughout the water in a
glass so that, eventually, the entire glass will be colored.
3. When steeping a cup of tea, molecules from the tea cross
from the tea bag and diffuse throughout the cup of water.
4. When shaking salt into water, the salt dissolves and
the ions move until they are evenly distributed.
5. After lighting a cigarette, the smoke spreads to all parts
of a room.
6. After placing a drop of food coloring onto a square of
gelatin, the color will spread to a lighter color throughout the block.
7. Carbon
dioxide bubbles diffuse from an open soda, leaving it flat.
8. If you place a wilted celery stick in water, water will
diffuse into the plant, making it firm again.
9. Water diffuses into cooking noodles, making them bigger and
softer.
10. A helium balloon deflates a little bit every day as helium
diffuses through the balloon into the air.
11. If you place a sugar cube in water, the sugar will dissolve
and evenly sweeten the water without having to stir it.
Osmosis and Diffusion Similarities
Osmosis and diffusion are related processes that display
similarities:
· Both osmosis and diffusion equalize the concentration of
two solutions.
· Both diffusion and osmosis are passive transport
processes, which means they do not require any input of extra energy
to occur. In both diffusion and osmosis, particles move from an area of higher
concentration to one of lower concentration.
Osmosis and Diffusion Differences
· Diffusion can occur in any mixture, including one that
includes a semipermeable membrane, while osmosis always occurs across a semipermeable membrane.
· When people discuss osmosis in biology, it always refers to
the movement of water. In chemistry, it's possible for other solvents to be
involved. In biology, this is a difference between the two processes.
· One big difference between osmosis and diffusion is that
both solvent and solute particles are free to move in diffusion, but when we
talk about osmosis, only the solvent
molecules (water molecules) cross the membrane.
This can be confusing to understand because while the
solvent particles are moving from higher to lower solvent concentration across the membrane, they
are moving from lower to higher solute concentration (from a more
dilute solution to a region of more concentrated solution).
This occurs naturally because the system seeks balance or
equilibrium. If the solute particles can't cross a barrier, the only way to
equalize concentration on both sides of the membrane is for the solvent
particles to move in.
You can consider osmosis to be a special case of diffusion
in which diffusion occurs across a semipermeable membrane and only the water or
other solvent moves.
Table Comparing Diffusion Versus Osmosis
Diffusion
|
Osmosis
|
Any
type of substance moves from area of highest energy or concentration to
region of lowest energy or concentration.
|
Only
water or another solvent moves from a region of high energy or concentration
to a region of lower energy or concentration.
|
Diffusion
can occur in any medium, whether it is liquid, solid, or gas.
|
Osmosis
occurs only in a liquid medium.
|
Diffusion
does not require a semipermeable membrane.
|
Osmosis
requires a semipermeable membrane.
|
The
concentration of the diffusion substance equalizes to fill the available
space.
|
The
concentration of the solvent does not become equal on both sides of the
membrane.
|
Hydrostatic
pressure and turgor pressure do not normally apply to diffusion.
|
Hydrostatic
pressure and turgor pressure oppose osmosis.
|
Diffusion
does not depend on solute potential, pressure potential, or water potential.
|
Osmosis
depends on solute potential.
|
Diffusion
mainly depends on the presence of other particles.
|
Osmosis
mainly depends on the number of solute particles dissolved in the solvent.
|
Diffusion
is a passive process.
|
Osmosis
is a passive process.
|
The
movement in diffusion is to equalize concentration (energy) throughout the
system.
|
The
movement in osmosis seeks to equalize solvent concentration (although it does
not achieve this).
|
Key Points
· Diffusion and osmosis are both passive transport processes
that act to equalize the concentration of a solution.
· In diffusion, particles move from an area of higher
concentration to one of lower concentration until equilibrium is reached. In
osmosis, a semipermeable membrane is present, so only the solvent molecules are
free to move to equalize concentration.
Anne
Marie Helmenstine, Ph.D.
Ph.D.
in biomedical sciences from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville - Oak
Ridge National Laboratory.
Science
educator with experience teaching chemistry, biology, astronomy, and
physics at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
ThoughtCo
and About Education chemistry expert since 2001.
Widely-published
graphic artist, responsible for printable periodic tables and other
illustrations used in science.
Experience
Anne
Helmenstine, Ph.D. has covered chemistry for ThoughtCo and About Education
since 2001, and other sciences since 2013. She taught chemistry, biology,
astronomy, and physics at the high school, college, and graduate levels.
She has worked as a research scientist and also abstracting and indexing
diverse scientific literature for the Department of Energy.
In
addition to her work as a science writer, Dr. Helmenstine currently serves as a
scientific consultant, specializing in problems requiring an interdisciplinary
approach. Previously, she worked as a research scientist and college
professor.
Education
Dr.
Helmenstine holds a Ph.D. in biomedical sciences from the University of
Tennessee at Knoxville and a B.A. in physics and mathematics with a minor
in chemistry from Hastings College. In her doctoral work, Dr. Helmenstine
developed ultra-sensitive chemical detection and medical diagnostic tests.
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