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diffusion |
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diffusion![]() Diffusion is the movement of molecules from a region of high concentration into a region of lower concentration. ![]() Diffusion can occur in gases, liquids, and solids. Substances diffuse at different speeds, fastest in gases and slowest in solids. In the gas example, the ring of ammonium chloride forms nearest to the hydrochloric acid end because ammonia diffuses faster than hydrochloric acid. ![]() Different types of transport across a cell membrane. Diffusion and osmosis are passive modes of transport, requiring no energy, moving from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration. Active transport requires energy to transport molecules from low concentration to high concentration. Net spontaneous and random movement of molecules or particles in a fluid (gas or liquid) from a region in which they are at a high concentration to a region of lower concentration, until a uniform concentration is achieved throughout. The difference in concentration between two such regions is called the concentration gradient. No mechanical mixing or stirring is involved. For instance, a drop of ink added to water will diffuse down the concentration gradient until evenly mixed. Diffusion occurs because particles in a liquid or gas are free to move according to the kinetic theory of matter. The molecules move randomly, but there is more chance that they will move out of the ink drop than into it, so the molecules diffuse until their colour becomes evenly distributed throughout. Diffusion occurs more rapidly across a higher concentration gradient and at higher temperatures. Diffusion is quite different from the movement of molecules when a fluid is flowing. In this case movement is not random; all molecules are moving together and in the same direction.
diffusion
diffusion
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In spite of this unprecedented rejection of diffusionism, however, the assumption was maintained that primitive societies were fundamentally passive and could change only under the impact of outside influences. |
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