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When their is low lipid solubility, how big in diameter can a molecule be in order to still pass through the membrane?

User Dij
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Final answer:

Large polar or ionic molecules cannot cross the membrane, while small polar molecules like water can diffuse across. Movement of solutes is restricted to protein channels and specialized transport mechanisms.

Step-by-step explanation:

Large polar or ionic molecules, which are hydrophilic, cannot easily cross the phospholipid bilayer. Very small polar molecules, such as water, can cross via simple diffusion due to their small size. Charged atoms or molecules of any size cannot cross the cell membrane via simple diffusion as the charges are repelled by the hydrophobic tails in the interior of the phospholipid bilayer. Solutes dissolved in water on either side of the cell membrane will tend to diffuse down their concentration gradients, but because most substances cannot pass freely through the lipid bilayer of the cell membrane, their movement is restricted to protein channels and specialized transport mechanisms in the membrane.

User Onur Demir
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