AP LAB 1 – OSMOSIS AND DIFFUSION
WRITE-UP GUIDELINES
Title
- AP Lab 2 – Osmosis and Diffusion
I. Abstract
II. Introduction
- Brief overview and purpose for part A, B, and E.
- Hypothesis for Part Aand B only.
III. Materials & Methods
- Provide a brief summary (2-3 sentences per part) of procedure followed in Parts A, B, and E
- Then write, “For a complete listing of materials and methods, see lab protocol titled . . . “
IV. Data
- Part A
- Table 1
- Graph 1
- Part B
- Table 2
- Part E
- 2 Onion Drawings – Before and After
Remember all graphs, data tables, and drawings must be hand-constructed using pencil/pen & ruler. Include a title for each. Graph axes must be labeled and axes spacing must be correct/appropriate.
V. Questions (Answer in complete sentences that re-state the question.)
Diffusion - Part A Questions
- Which substance(s) are entering the bag and which are leaving the bag? What experimental evidence supports your answer?
- Explain the results you obtained. Include the concentration differences and membrane pore size in your discussion.
- Quantitative data uses numbers to measure observed changes. How could this experiment be modified so that quantitative data could be collected to show that water diffused into the dialysis bag?
- What results would you expect if the experiment started with glucose and KI solution inside the bag and only starch and water of the outside? Why?
Osmosis - Part B Questions
- In part B, what caused the mass of the dialysis bags to change? Was there more or less water in the dialysis bags at the conclusion of the experiment? Explain.
- Was the distilled water in the beakers hypertonic or hypotonic in relation to the sucrose solutions found in the dialysis bags?
- Suppose the dialysis bags were placed in beakers containing a 0.6 M sucrose solution as opposed to distilled water. How do you think your results would change?
Onion Cell Plasmolysis - Part E Questions
- What is plasmolysis and why did the onion cell plasmolyze?
- What are the effects on cells when they are placed in a hypotonic solution, a hypertonic solution, and an isotonic solution?
- Why cant humans drink salt water for hydration?
VI. Conclusion
- Re-address purpose for Part A, B, and E.
- Re-address hypothesis for Part A.
- If your hypothesis was correct, confirm it.
- If your hypothesis was incorrect, explain why it was incorrect.
- Re-address hypothesis for Part B.
- If your hypothesis was correct, confirm it.
- If your hypothesis was incorrect, explain why it was incorrect.
- Possible sources of error.
- Do not make a blanket statement such as “calculations were off, measurements were off, etc.”
- Think of how these errors would/could affect the outcome of the experiment.