Diffusion (AQA AS Biology): Revision Note

Exam code: 7401

Lára Marie McIvor

Written by: Lára Marie McIvor

Reviewed by: Ruth Brindle

Updated on

Diffusion

  • Diffusion is a type of transportation that occurs across the cell membrane

  • It can be defined as:

The net movement of molecules or ions from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration

  • The molecules or ions move down a concentration gradient

  • Movement is random and is caused by the natural kinetic energy of the molecules or ions

Diagram showing molecules crossing a lipid bilayer from a higher concentration in the extracellular fluid to a lower concentration in the cytoplasm.
Diffusion across the cell membrane

Diffusion across the cell membrane

  • As a result of diffusion, molecules or ions tend to reach an equilibrium situation (given sufficient time), where they are evenly spread within a given volume of space

Factors influencing the rate of diffusion

  • The rate at which a substance diffuses across a membrane depends on several factors

    Factor

    How the factor affects the rate of diffusion

    Steepness of the concentration gradient

    • A greater difference in concentration means more molecules move from high to low concentration

    • This increases the net rate of diffusion across the membrane

    Temperature

    • Higher temperatures give molecules more kinetic energy, so they move faster

    • This results in a higher rate of diffusion

    Surface area

    • A larger surface area allows more molecules to diffuse at once

    • Folding (e.g. microvilli, cristae) increases surface area

    • In larger cells, a lower surface area to volume ratio slows diffusion

    Properties of molecules or ions

    • Large molecules diffuse more slowly as they need more energy

    • Uncharged, non-polar molecules diffuse directly through the bilayer

    • Non-polar molecules diffuse faster than polar ones

Facilitated diffusion

  • Certain substances cannot diffuse through the phospholipid bilayer of cell membranes. These include:

    • Large polar molecules such as glucose and amino acids

    • Ions such as sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-)

  • These substances can only cross the phospholipid bilayer with the help of certain proteins

  • This form of diffusion is known as facilitated diffusion

  • There are two types of proteins that enable facilitated diffusion:

    • Channel proteins

    • Carrier proteins

  • They are highly specific (they only allow one type of molecule or ion to pass through)

Channel proteins

  • Channel proteins are water-filled pores

  • They allow charged substances (eg. ions) to diffuse through the cell membrane

  • The diffusion of these ions does not occur freely, most channel proteins are ‘gated’, meaning that part of the channel protein on the inside surface of the membrane can move in order to close or open the pore

  • This allows the channel protein to control the exchange of ions

Diagram of a cell membrane showing a phospholipid bilayer with sodium(Na⁺) channels, one open and one closed, indicating ion transport across the membrane.
Channel proteins in the cell membrane

Carrier proteins

  • Unlike channel proteins which have a fixed shape, carrier proteins can switch between two shapes

  • This causes the binding site of the carrier protein to be open to one side of the membrane first, and then open to the other side of the membrane when the carrier protein switches shape

  • Net diffusion of molecules or ions into or out of a cell will occur down a concentration gradient (from an area containing many of that specific molecule to an area containing less of that molecule)

Diagram of facilitated diffusion in a cell membrane, showing polar molecules moving through carrier proteins from high to low concentration.
A carrier protein changing shape during facilitated diffusion across the cell membrane

Examiner Tips and Tricks

Remember – the movement of molecules from high concentration to low concentration is diffusion. If this movement requires the aid of a protein (for example because the molecule is charged and cannot pass directly through the phospholipid bilayer) this is facilitated diffusion.

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Lára Marie McIvor

Author: Lára Marie McIvor

Expertise: Biology, Psychology & Sociology Subject Lead

Lára graduated from Oxford University in Biological Sciences and has now been a science tutor working in the UK for several years. Lára has a particular interest in the area of infectious disease and epidemiology, and enjoys creating original educational materials that develop confidence and facilitate learning.

Ruth Brindle

Reviewer: Ruth Brindle

Expertise: Biology Content Creator

Ruth graduated from Sheffield University with a degree in Biology and went on to teach Science in London whilst also completing an MA in innovation in Education. With 10 years of teaching experience across the 3 key science disciplines, Ruth decided to set up a tutoring business to support students in her local area. Ruth has worked with several exam boards and loves to use her experience to produce educational materials which make the mark schemes accessible to all students.