Sunday, August 18, 2019
An Investigation to Show How Water Temperature and Alcohol Concentratio
An Investigation to Show How Water Temperature and Alcohol Concentration Affect Membrane Permeability      Aim The aim of the experiment is to show the cellââ¬â¢s membrane  permeability is affected by being placed into different temperatures  of water. Also the effect of placing beetroot in to different  concentrations of alcohol.    Beetroot cells contain a red sap, which leaks out of the cells if  their membranes are damaged or altered. Cell membranes are made up of  a bilayer of phospholipids, which also contains proteins. Which either  float around or are fixed. Some are found in the inner or outer layer  and some span the whole membrane Carbohydrate chains attach themselves  to the external membrane forming glycoproteins and glycolipids. It  also contains cholesterol. We will be able to tell how damaged they  are because we will see a deeper coloured red in the water from where  more of the red sap has leaked out of the cells.    Method A fresh cylinder of beetroot was taken and using a scalpel any  skin was removed. Care should be taken when a scalpel is used to cut  objects into small pieces. It was then cut into 40 discs using the  scalpel. Next the discs were placed in a boiling tube and rinsed  repeatedly in till the water ran clear. Then two sets of five boiling  tubes were set up into racks. Then using a measuring cylinder measured  10cmà ³ of tap water was placed in five of the boiling tubes of the set  that would be testing the effect of different temperatures. These were  then left in the different water baths to adjust to the temperature.  The other five had 10cmà ³ different concentrations of alcohol ranging  from 25%-100%. There was also one with 10cmà ³ of water. Next four discs  of the beetroot were placed into each boil...              ...es down to 24%. I think this an anomalous  result as after researching this 100% alcohol is used to preserve food  so the light transmission percentage should of gone up but this needed  to be repeated.    I think the main source of error in these two experiments that could  have lessened the accuracy was that there was some variation in the  thickness of some of the beetroot discs. I think this is hard to  improve as this is generally down to human error of not being able to  cut beetroot exactly into 1-2mm discs. The experiment needed to be  repeated to see more clearly if there were any anomalous results.    Works Cited:    Advanced Sciences Biology 1, Mary Jones, Richard Fosbery  and Dennis Taylor    AS guru Biology, John Graham and Anthony Lewis    Biology Principles and Processes, Michael Roberts, Michael Reiss and  Grace Monger    Www.bbc.co.uk/asguru/biology                        
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