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    Bio Poem

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    movement of water molecules. When observed‚ there are two types to a solution: solute and solvent. The solute is a dissolved substance and the solvent is when the solute is dissolved. When you have more than one solution‚ you compare them to see if they are hypotonic‚ hypertonic‚ or isotonic. Hypotonic is when the other solution in comparison to the solution you are looking at is less solute. Hypertonic is explained as when one solution is more

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    high concentration to eventually reach an equilibrium. Osmosis is when water will diffuse from high water concentration to low water concentration to reach equilibrium. When the solutions are different the lower concentration solute is hypotonic while the higher concentration solute is hypertonic. The hypertonic solution would have a low water potential with a high solute potential. Hypotonic would be the opposite because water potential and solute potential are inversely proportional. Water potential

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    Unit1 Case Study

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    issue 5‚ pages 437–444. This article provides you information on specific trends. Case Study In his book Employees First‚ Customers Second: Turning Conventional Management Upside Down‚ Vineet Nayar‚ CEO of HCL Technologies‚ a leading global IT services company‚ explores the role of leadership in a knowledge economy. The following case study appears in Chapter 4 of his book. You will be referring to this case study extensively throughout this course. * Nayar‚ V. (2010). "Recasting the role

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    Absorption Spectra

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    Introduction At any particular wavelength the absorption of light when visible light passes through a solution depends on two factors: * The length of the light path * The concentration of the colored path The connection of these two variables is known as the Beer-Lambert Law: Absorbance (A) = ε c l Where ε is the absorption coefficient C is the concentration of the compound And l is the length of light usually 1cm When I is constant‚ this proves a linear relationship between

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    Plasmolysis and Osmosis

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    until the concentration is equilibrium. There are usually more solvents in the water inside the plant which means there is a high concentration. Because of this‚ the water flows into the root hair cells from the soil. Watering plants with a saline solution (salty water) changes the osmotic potential of the soil. This results to the water surrounding the root more saline than the cell sap within the plant. This causes reverse-osmosis where the nutrients are actually drawn out of the plant and into the

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    Purpose: Our purpose here to determine the affects of temperature on potassium nitrate’s solubility in water. Materials Used in the Experiment: Latex gloves Laboratory coat Safety goggles Thermometer Stir rod Test tubes Beaker Weighing dish Hot plate Potassium nitrate Distilled water Description of the Object of the Experiment Potassium Nitrate: The chemical compound potassium nitrate is a naturally occurring mineral source of nitrogen. It is a nitrate with chemical

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    Chemistry Paper

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    reduced. You are to plan an experiment to investigate how the boiling point of an aqueous solution of potassium chloride depends on the concentration of the solution. (a) (i) By considering how the vapour pressure changes as the concentration of the aqueous potassium chloride increases‚ predict and explain how the boiling point of the solution will be affected by the concentration of the solution. Predict how the boiling point will change

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    Osmosis Lab

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    in different solutions while trying to reach equilibrium? Background Information Osmosis is the procedure where water or different types of liquids move through a semipermeable membrane. This type of passage is considered as simple diffusion where no energy is required. This means that the liquid will have to leave the cell or enter it so that equilibrium can be reached. Equilibrium is the state reached when the amount of concentration is equal between the cell and the solution it is placed

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    Molarity Lab Report

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    moles of a solute by the volume of the solution in liters. Multiple series of solutions with different concentrations can be used by diluting the concentration. The dilution technique is: Number Moles Concentrated Solution = Number Moles Dilute Solution. An instrument called a spectrophotometer detects the amount of light that passes through the sample and the percent transmittance can be recorded from the meter. In the lab‚ multiple homogeneous solutions are made. There was not a way to determine

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    Osmosis

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    Osmosis Osmosis is a special example of diffusion. It is the diffusion of water through a partially permeable membrane from a more dilute solution to a more concentrated solution – down the water potential gradient) Note: diffusion and osmosis are both passive‚ i.e. energy from ATP is not used. A partially permeable membrane is a barrier that permits the passage of some substances but not others; it allows the passage of the solvent molecules but not some of the larger solute molecules. Cell

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