๐Ÿ’ง
Practical 5Spec ref: 4.1.3.2

Osmosis in Plant Tissue

Linked to B1: Cell Biology

Aim

Investigate the effect of different sucrose concentrations on the mass of potato tissue.

Equipment

  • โ€ขPotato
  • โ€ขCork borer
  • โ€ขScalpel and ruler
  • โ€ขBalance (accurate to 0.01 g)
  • โ€ขSucrose solutions: 0.0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8 mol/dmยณ
  • โ€ขPetri dishes
  • โ€ขPaper towels
  • โ€ขStopwatch

Variables

Independent variable
Concentration of sucrose solution (0.0โ€“0.8 mol/dmยณ)
Dependent variable
Percentage change in mass of potato cylinder
Controlled variables
Length of potato cylinder, time in solution (30 min), volume of solution, temperature, same potato variety

Key Facts to Know

โœ“Osmosis: net movement of water from high to low water potential through a partially permeable membrane
โœ“Dilute solution = higher water potential. Concentrated = lower water potential.
โœ“Potato gains mass: water entered by osmosis (external solution more dilute)
โœ“Potato loses mass: water left by osmosis (external solution more concentrated)
โœ“Isotonic point: no net water movement โ€” water potential inside = outside

โš ๏ธ Common Mistakes

  • โœ—Not using percentage change in mass โ€” raw mass change is unfair if cylinders start at different masses
  • โœ—Saying water moves from concentrated to dilute โ€” say 'high to low water potential'
  • โœ—Not patting potato dry before reweighing โ€” water on surface adds to mass

๐Ÿ’ก Exam Tips

  • โ˜…% change = (final - initial) รท initial ร— 100
  • โ˜…The isotonic concentration = water potential of potato cells โ€” where the line crosses 0% on the graph
  • โ˜…Use percentage change, not absolute change, to account for different starting masses