Pages

Monday, February 11, 2019

What is osmosis in science

Osmosis is the impulsive net movement of solvent particles through a semi-permeable membrane or barrier into a higher solute concentration area, in the direction that equals the soluble concentration on both sides. Similarly, it can be used to explain a physical process in which any solvent travel over a semi-permeable separating two solutions which are different in concentration.
Osmotic pressure is characterized as the external pressure necessary to be applied, so that over the membrane there is no net movement of a solvent, such as water. It is a colligative property, means that the osmotic pressure relies upon the solute molar concentration however not on its identity.


You may also like this


What is diffusion in science
Difference between Diffusion and Osmosis
What is osmotic pressure
What is reverse osmosis
Advantages and Disadvantages of Reverse Osmosis
Difference between osmosis and reverse osmosis
The similarity between Diffusion and Osmosis
Difference between Osmotic Pressure and Osmotic Potential
Difference between Osmolarity and Osmolality

No comments:

Post a Comment