Osmosis & Microscopy
Observation of osmosis in plant cells using a light microscope
- Evidence of osmosis occurring in plant cells can be shown when plant cells undergo plasmolysis:
- If a plant cell is placed in a solution with a lower water potential than the plant cell (such as a concentrated sucrose solution), water will leave the plant cell through it partially permeable cell surface membrane by osmosis
- As water leaves the vacuole of the plant cell, the volume of the plant cell decreases
- The protoplast (living part of the cell inside the cell wall) gradually shrinks and no longer exerts pressure on the cell wall
- As the protoplast continues to shrink, it begins to pull away from the cell wall
- This process is known as plasmolysis – the plant cell is plasmolysed
- This process can be observed using epidermal strips (sections of the very thin outer layer of tissue in plants)
- Plants with coloured sap (such as red onion bulbs, rhubarb petioles and red cabbage) make observations easier
- The epidermal strips are placed in a range of molarities of sucrose solution or sodium chloride solutions
- The strips are then viewed under a light microscope
- Plasmolysis may take several minutes to occur
Light micrograph of normal red onion cells alongside those that have plasmolysed (artistic impression)