Diffusion is a type of passive transport. In passive transport, a substance tends to move from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration until the concentration is equal across the space. For example, take the diffusion of substances through the air. When someone opens a perfume bottle in a room filled with people, the perfume is at its highest concentration in the bottle and is at its lowest at the edges of the room. The perfume vapor will diffuse, or spread away, from the bottle, and gradually, more and more people will smell the perfume as it spreads. Materials move within the cell’s cytosol by diffusion, and certain materials move through the plasma membrane by diffusion. Diffusion expends no energy. Rather the different concentrations of materials in different areas are a form of potential energy, and diffusion is the dissipation of that potential energy as materials move down their concentration gradients from high to low.
Each separate substance in a medium, such as the extracellular fluid, has its own concentration gradient, independent of the concentration gradients of other materials. Additionally, each substance will diffuse according to that gradient.
Several factors affect the rate of diffusion.
This text is adapted from Openstax, Concepts of Biology, Section 3.5, Passive Transport.
From Chapter 6:
Now Playing
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
2.6K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
1.9K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
1.2K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
12.4K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
947 Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
2.5K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
2.1K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
1.1K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
1.7K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
2.8K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
1.9K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
1.3K Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
980 Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
842 Views
Cell Membrane Structure and Functions
2.0K Views
ABOUT JoVE
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved