Practical - Investigating Osmosis (OCR GCSE Biology A (Gateway))
Revision Note
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)
Osmosis & its Effects
We can investigate osmosis by using cylinders of potato and placing them into distilled water and sucrose solutions of increasing concentration
Apparatus
Potatoes
Cork borer
Knife
Sucrose solutions (from 0 Mol/dm3 to 1 mol/dm3)
Test tubes
Balance
Paper towels
Ruler
Test tube rack
Method
Prepare a range of sucrose (sugar) solutions ranging from 0 mol dm⁻³ (distilled water) to 1 mol dm⁻³
Set up 6 labelled test tubes with 10cm³ of each of the sucrose solutions
Using the knife, cork borer and ruler, cut 6 equally-sized cylinders of potato
Blot each one with a paper towel and weigh on the balance
Put 1 piece into each concentration of sucrose solution
After 4 hours, remove them, blot with paper towels and reweigh them
Experimental method for investigating osmosis in potato cylinders
Results and analysis
The percentage change in mass can be calculated for each piece of potato
Calculating percentage change in mass
The potato cylinder in the distilled water will have increased its mass the most as there is a greater concentration gradient in this tube between the distilled water (high water potential) and the potato cells (lower water potential)
This means more water molecules will move into the potato cells by osmosis, pushing the cell membrane against the cell wall and so increasing the turgor pressure in the cells which makes them turgid - the potato cylinders will feel hard
The potato cylinder in the strongest sucrose concentration will have decreased its mass the most as there is a greater concentration gradient in this tube between the potato cells (higher water potential) and the sucrose solution (lower water potential)
This means more water molecules will move out of the potato cells by osmosis, making them flaccid and decreasing the mass of the cylinder - the potato cylinders will feel floppy
If looked at underneath the microscope, cells from this potato cylinder might be plasmolysed, meaning the cell membrane has pulled away from the cell wall
If there is a potato cylinder that has not increased or decreased in mass, it means there was no overall net movement of water into or out of the potato cells
This is because the solution that the cylinder was in was the same concentration as the solution found in the cytoplasm of the potato cells, so there was no concentration gradient
Limitations
Slight differences in the potato cylinders may mean that the results aren't reliable or comparable. A possible solution to this limitation could be:
For each sucrose concentration, repeat the investigation with several potato cylinders. Making a series of repeat experiments means that any anomalous results can be identified and ignored when a mean is calculated
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Questions involving osmosis experiments are common and you should be able to use your knowledge of these processes to explain the results. Don’t worry if it is an experiment you haven’t done. Simply figure out where the higher concentration of water molecules is (this is the solution with the higher water potential) and explain which way the molecules move due to the differences in water potential.
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