Condition of a cell placed in hypotonic solution
Asked by maham237 @ in Biology viewed by 257 People
A red blood cell placed in a hypertonic solution will shrink in a process called crenation. A red blood cell placed in a hypotonic solution will swell and potentially burst in a process called hemolysis. To prevent crenation or hemolysis, a cell must be placed in an isotonic solution such as 0.9% (m/v) NaCl or 5.0% (m/v) glucose. This does not mean that a cell has a 5.0% (m/v) glucose concentration; it just means that 5.0% (m/v) glucose will exert the same osmotic pressure as the solution inside the cell, which contains several different solutes. A red blood cell is placed into each of the following solutions. Indicate whether crenation, hemolysis, or neither will occur. Solution
A: 3.21% (m/v) NaCl Solution
B: 1.65% (m/v) glucose Solution
C: distilled H2O Solution
D: 6.97% (m/v) glucose Solution
E: 5.0% (m/v) glucose and 0.9%(m/v) NaCl
Drag each solution to the appropriate bin.