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diffusion
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diffusion

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Diffusion is the movement of molecules from a region of high concentration into a region of lower concentration.
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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.
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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.

In biological systems, diffusion plays an essential role in the transport, over short distances (for example across cell membranes), of molecules such as nutrients, respiratory gases (carbon dioxide and oxygen), and neurotransmitters. It provides the means by which small molecules pass into and out of individual cells and micro-organisms, such as an amoeba, that possess no circulatory system. Plant and animal organs whose function depends on diffusion - such as the lung - have a large surface area. Diffusion of water across a semi-permeable membrane is termed osmosis. Some important processes which involve diffusion are: the uptake of the products of digestion from the gut, gas exchange in the lungs, and gas exchange in the leaves of plants.

One application of diffusion is the separation of isotopes, particularly those of uranium. When uranium hexafluoride diffuses through a porous plate, the ratio of the 235 and 238 isotopes is changed slightly. With sufficient number of passes, the separation is nearly complete. There are large plants in the USA and UK for obtaining enriched fuel for fast nuclear reactors and the fissile uranium-235, originally required for the first atom bombs. Another application is the diffusion pump, used extensively in vacuum work, in which the gas to be evacuated diffuses into a chamber from which it is carried away by the vapour of a suitable medium, usually oil or mercury.

Laws of diffusion

Laws of diffusion were formulated by Thomas Graham in 1829 (for gases) and Adolph Fick 1829-1901 (for solutions).



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Especially important to my project are Pratt's contention that the discourse of modernity is the identity discourse of Northern Europe and North America and its resulting corollaries that call our attention to "the diffusionist character of modernity" and "the centrism of the metropolitan discourse on modernity" (23, 28).
The diffusionist assumption that both views share was briefly challenged around 1900, when a team of Cambridge anthropologists led by Alfred Cort Haddon suggested that the differences between the savage and the civilized were not the product of evolutionary distance but instead of different social and physical environments.
Rather than a simple diffusionist model flowing out of the hegemonic capital, he tells a cautionary tale in his finding of a constant interplay between the dominant power and its dependent cities -- with local elites, powerful landed families, and professionals a t the only university town of Padua often defying the logic of political and economic control through expression of cultural independence.
 
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