| 11. | He also noted that a thin film of oil behaves as a semipermeable membrane, precisely as predicted.
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| 12. | Reverse osmosis systems used pressure to force water through a semipermeable membrane; the tiny openings in the membrane separate contaminants.
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| 13. | The interesting features of these particles were that they were enclosed in a semipermeable membrane, like the typical cell membrane.
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| 14. | Diffusion of crude natural gas through special semipermeable membranes and other barriers is another method to recover and purify helium.
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| 15. | The diaper can absorb a huge amount of water by osmosis, in which the semipermeable membrane is the polymer itself.
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| 16. | A semipermeable membrane is necessary because it allows water through its membrane while preventing solutes from moving through its membrane.
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| 17. | The principle of hemodialysis is the same as other methods of dialysis; it involves diffusion of solutes across a semipermeable membrane.
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| 18. | Procter & Wilson ( 1916 ) demonstrated that gels, which do not have a semipermeable membrane, would swell in dilute solutions.
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| 19. | Once inserted into the tissue or ( body ) fluid of interest, small solutes can cross the semipermeable membrane by passive diffusion.
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| 20. | In peritoneal dialysis, wastes and water are removed from the blood inside the body using the peritoneum as a natural semipermeable membrane.
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