subject
Chemistry, 11.04.2020 01:31 kaylijocombs

The human red-blood-cell membrane is freely permeable to water but not at all to sucrose. The membrane forms a completely closed bag, and it is found by trial and error that adding the cells to a solution of a particular concentration of sucrose results in neither swelling nor shrinking of the cells. In a separate experiment, the freezing point of that particular sucrose solution is found to be -0.56∘C. If the exterior of the cell contains only KCl solution, estimate the KCl concentration. Assume that the membrane is also impermeable to KCl. If these cells are suspended in distilled water at 0∘C, what would be the internal hydrostatic pressure at equilibrium, assuming that the cell did not change volume?---This is the all the information I'm given, I'm not even exactly sure where to start here.

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on Chemistry

question
Chemistry, 21.06.2019 23:00
When determining the shape of a molecule, it is important to draw a lewis dot structure first in order to see the total number a. electrons within the moleculeb. bonding and unshared pairs around central atomc. unshared pair within the molecule( i really need it )
Answers: 1
question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 05:00
Cucl2 + 2nano3 cu(no3)2 + 2nacl what is the percent yield of nacl if 31.0 g of cucl2 reacts with excess nano3 to produce 21.2 g of nacl? 49.7% 58.4% 63.6% 78.7%
Answers: 1
question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 07:20
Why does his teacher ask him to balance the equation by including the correct coefficient
Answers: 1
question
Chemistry, 22.06.2019 12:00
Which of the following is an example of physical change not a chemical change? a) a log gives off heat and light as it burns. b) a tree stores energy from the sun in its fruit. c) a penny lost in the grass slowly changes color. d) a water pipe freezes and cracks on a cold night.
Answers: 2
You know the right answer?
The human red-blood-cell membrane is freely permeable to water but not at all to sucrose. The membra...
Questions
question
Spanish, 06.03.2021 03:30
question
Mathematics, 06.03.2021 03:30
Questions on the website: 13722363