BIOL 1117 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Ph1B, Heat Capacity, Logarithmic Scale

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Adhesion: tendency of one substance to stick to another, water adheres to other substances easily; such as tissues in body, form lubricating films. A solution consists of particles of matter called a solute mixed with a more abundant substance, usually water called a solvent. Solute particles will pass through the selectively permeable membrane. The solution will stay dissolved; the solutes will not separate from a solvent. A colloid is a mixture of larger particles (still called solutes) in a solvent, such as albumin in blood plasma. Particles are too large to pass through a selectively permeable membrane, but the solution will stay dissolved. (not separate) A suspension has large particles mixed in a solvent such as red blood cells in blood plasma. Particles are too large to pass through semipermeable membrane, but particles will separate from the solvent over time. (do not remain permanently mixed)

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