What is a concentration gradient?
A difference in solute concentration between two regions which can drive diffusion.
What is diffusion?
The process of molecules moving from a higher concentration to a lower concentration.
What is osmosis?
The movement of water across a selectively permeable membrane from lower solute (higher water potential) to higher solute (lower water potential).
It controls the balance of water, salt, and volume inside the cell.
What is passive diffusion?
Also known as simple diffusion, it occurs when molecules move directly across the membrane.
Movement of small nonpolar molecules down their concentration gradient directly through the lipid bilayer; no energy required.
What is facilitated diffusion?
The movement of larger molecules, including charged and polar solutes, through a carrier protein in the cell membrane.
Uses membrane proteins to move polar/charged solutes down their concentration gradient; no ATP required.
What are the three types of transport?
What is active transport?
Moving solutes against their concentration gradient, requiring cellular energy or ATP.
What are the two types of diffusion, and in what direction do molecules move in each?
Both move down the concentration gradient; facilitated uses proteins; no ATP.
What is the role of the carrier protein in facilitated diffusion?
It assists in transporting small particles or ions across the cell membrane through a specific channel.
Carrier/channel proteins provide a pathway for specific solutes to move down their concentration gradient; no ATP required.
What is thermodynamics?
It is the study of energy transfer involving heat, work, and temperature, and how these relate to entropy and the properties of matter.
What is the first law of thermodynamics also known as?
The ‘Law of Conservation of Energy’
It states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred.
An example is when the chlorophyll absorbs light and transforms it into chemical energy.
What is the second law of thermodynamics?
It states that the entropy in a system increases with time.
As time goes on Entropy- the disorder of energy- increases so there is less energy available to perform useful work
What is the third law of thermodynamics?
It states that the degree of randomness, entropy, tends to a minimum value as the temperature approaches absolute zero.
The colder a system gets the less entropy, or disorder of energy, can be found.
What is the absolute zero temperature in Kelvin?
0 Kelvin
What is the relationship between kinetic energy and thermal energy?
Explain the concept of entropy.
It is the measure of energy unavailable for performing useful work.
What is anabolism?
Takes simpler molecules and builds them into more complex ones, generally using ATP in the process.
Energy is absorbed in anabolic reactions.
Examples:
What is catabolism?
Breaks down complex molecules into simpler ones, releasing and producing ATP in the process.
Energy is released in catabolic reactions.
Examples: glycolysis, cellular respiration, ATP synthesis.
What is metabolism?
The collection of all the chemical processes that occur within the body, encompassing both energy-producing and energy-consuming reactions.
What is cellular respiration?
A group of reactions inside cells that harvest biochemical energy from nutrients to produce ATP.
What are the steps of cellular respiration?
What are amphibolic pathways?
Pathways that can be both anabolic or catabolic depending on the energy state of the body.
Example: The citric acid (TCA) cycle, or exercise.
What is the difference between anabolic and catabolic pathways?
What is the role of ATP in metabolism?
Provides energy for cellular processes.