Find more facts and information on our topic page about
diffusion
diffusion
The Oxford Companion to the Body
|
2001
|
|
© The Oxford Companion to the Body 2001, originally published by Oxford University Press 2001. (Hide copyright information)
Copyright
diffusion The name applied to a physical process by which individual particles move randomly, within a fluid, from areas of high concentration to lower concentration until the particles are evenly distributed throughout the space. The particles referred to can be molecules or ions and the fluid can be either gaseous or liquid. For example, a person wearing perfume can be noticed on entering a room because molecules of the odiferous substances contained within the perfume diffuse in the air and are detected by the nose. Similarly, a drop of dye dropped into a glass of water will eventually colour the whole volume as the molecules of dye diffuse evenly throughout the volume. Because of thermal motion and vibration, a molecule, ion, or small particle undergoes 10
13 to 10
15 collisions per second with molecules of the fluid. The particle is said to undergo a
random walk, in which the result of a particular collision is independent of the effects of previous collisions. The statistical consequence of this is that the displacement of a particle from its original position will depend on the elapsed time. Where the diffusing particles are at high concentration, many collisions will be between the diffusing species, so that they will move away from each other, thus creating a flux from high concentration to low until the concentration is even throughout the volume. Diffusion is influenced by many factors, such as viscosity and electric charge. Thus diffusion in treacle will be slower than diffusion in water, and particles carrying the same charge will exert mutual repulsion.
Diffusion is an important process for bodily function. Important substances, such as
oxygen and
carbon dioxide, not only need to diffuse within a particular fluid volume but need to diffuse from one bodily compartment to another across barriers, where generally diffusion will be slower than within a fluid. Consider the position in the
lungs; oxygen from the air has to diffuse across the walls of the alveoli and of the capillaries within the lungs to reach the blood, and then across the walls of the red cells to reach the
haemoglobin. Fortunately it combines with the haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin, thus maintaining a steep concentration gradient. At the same time carbon dioxide, released from the venous blood, needs to diffuse in the opposite direction, down its concentration gradient, into the lungs, in order to be exhaled. As the transit time of blood in the lungs is just a few seconds, the diffusive process needs to be rapid. (If, for example, the lungs are filled with thick, viscid mucus, as in bronchiectasis or cystic fibrosis, then the diffusive process is impaired and full oxygenation will not occur). Conversely, when oxygenated blood arrives at the tissues the conditions are such that oxygen is released and needs to diffuse into the cells to maintain tissue respiration, whilst carbon dioxide, a product of tissue respiration, needs to be loaded into the blood for conveyance back to the lungs.
Diffusion is similarly important in the absorptive processes in the gut. The purpose of digestion is to break down complex molecules into simple ones such as
sugars,
fats, and
peptides. The lining of the gut wall has many specialized transporters to take the breakdown products into the cells and to transfer them to the blood, for delivery to tissues where they can be used as a source of energy, stored, or used for growth and repair. However, to arrive at the transporters the products of digestion need to diffuse from the gut contents, through the aqueous stationary layer closest to the lining of the gut, to reach the transporters. Diffusion therefore is a universally important process affecting every aspect of living tissue. A single living cell is a hive of activity. Substances produced within the cell which are important for its normal functioning may be produced at one site but then interact with another part of the cell, which they reach by diffusion, moving from high concentration to low by way of thermal motion, an inherent physical property.
Alan W. Cuthbert
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Diffusion of innovations theory for alcohol, tobacco, and drugs.(Editorial)
Magazine article from: Journal of Alcohol & Drug Education; 4/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...than hundred years have passed since the diffusion of innovations theory originated. But...published (Rogers, 2003). The hallmark of diffusion of innovations theory is that it deals...adoption by people in a systematic manner. Diffusion of innovations theory is an effective...
|
|
Anomalous Diffusion of Proteins Due to Molecular Crowding
Magazine article from: Biophysical Journal; 11/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ABSTRACT We have studied the diffusion of tracer proteins in highly concentrated...spectroscopy, we measured the anomalous diffusion exponent a characterizing the dependence...945;^. We observed that the diffusion of proteins in dextran solutions...
|
|
Diffusion Becomes HP "Covision" Ally, Inks Reseller Pact With HP Reseller Inacom Professional Services.
Business Wire; 6/22/1998; 700+ words
; ...BUSINESS WIRE)--June 22, 1998--The Diffusion Server, an enterprise-level client...products. Under an agreement signed with Diffusion, Inc., Inacom Professional Services...organization of Inacom Corp., will resell the Diffusion Server in combination with HP computer...
|
|
Diffusion Raises $6 Million in Latest Funding; Canaan Partners Added as New Investor.
Business Wire; 5/11/1998; 700+ words
; ...BUSINESS WIRE)--May 11, 1998--Diffusion, Inc., developer of client communications...Capital and Matrix Partners. Jim Gagnard, Diffusion president and CEO, said the money will...there has been strong early interest in Diffusion Server as an information-delivery vehicle...
|
|
Diffusion Energizes Web Sites With Multiple Delivery Media
PR Newswire; 11/10/1997; 700+ words
; Diffusion Information Delivery Server 2.0 Leverages All Enterprise...MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Nov. 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Diffusion, Inc. today announced the availability of Diffusion Server 2.0, the first information delivery server...
|
|
Diffusion Raises $5.1 Million in Third Round Funding
PR Newswire; 3/17/1997; 700+ words
; ...Calif., March 17 /PRNewswire/ -- Diffusion, Inc. -- developer of IntraExpress...of Brentwood to the investor roster at Diffusion and brings the total capital invested...said Jim Gagnard, president and CEO of Diffusion. "Brentwood is a quality venture capital...
|
|
Diffusion indexes of industrial production.
Newspaper article from: Federal Reserve Bulletin; 7/1/1991; 700+ words
; Diffusion Indexes of Industrial Production Beginning...Federal Reserve will resume publication of diffusion indexes of industrial production (IP...Production and Capacity Utilization; diffusion indexes previously were published from...
|
|
Diffusion studies in the (beta)(B(2)), (beta') (Bcc), and (gamma)(FCC) Fe-Ni-Al alloys at 1000 (degree C)
Magazine article from: Metallurgical and Materials Transactions; 11/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; Diffusion studies were carried out in the Fe...system at 1000deg C with solid-solid diffusion couples assembled with Beta (132...phase alloys for the development of diffusion structures, diffusion paths, and for...
|
|
Diffusion indexes: a barometer of the economy.
Magazine article from: Monthly Labor Review; 4/1/1990; ; 700+ words
; BLS diffusion indexes measure the breadth of employment...of Labor Statistics has improved the diffusion index of employment produced as part...Employment Statistics program. The old diffusion index, which included 185 industries...
|
|
Diffusion MRI: Overview and clinical applications in neuroradiology
Magazine article from: Applied Radiology; 11/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; Clinical diffusion neuroimaging, introduced in the early...Numerous pitfalls in the interpretation of diffusion images have also become apparent, necessitating...understanding of the physical basis of diffusion MR imaging. Technical aspects of diffusion...
|
|
Diffusion Theory
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Public Health
DIFFUSION THEORY Research on the diffusion of innovations model began with the Bryce Ryan and Neal C. Gross investigation (1943) of the diffusion of hybrid seed corn among Iowa farmers. By 1941, about thirteen...
|
|
Diffusion
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science
Diffusion Resources Diffusion is the movement of molecules along a concentration gradient, from an area of high concentration to one of low concentration. Diffusion proceeds until the two concentrations are equal. Diffusion occurs...
|
|
diffusion
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
diffusion in chemistry, the spontaneous migration...regions where their concentration is low. Diffusion is important in many life processes...the motion of molecules, the rate of diffusion of molecules out of any region in a substance...
|
|
Knowledge, Diffusion of
Encyclopedia entry from: International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences
Knowledge, Diffusion of Diffusion suggests a drop of color in water, spreading until uniformly...can diffuse until “ everybody knows. ” Diffusion is less specific than communication, and seems driven by the...
|
|
Agar Diffusion
Book article from: World of Microbiology and Immunology
Agar diffusion Agar diffusion refers to the movement of molecules through the matrix that is formed...concentration of the molecule. This phenomenon forms the basis of the agar diffusion assay that is used to determine the susceptibility or resistance...
|