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Surface tension in the alveolus will result in a tendency to ____________. This can be prevented by _____________

a) Collapse, surfactant
b) Expand, mucus
c) Collapse, mucus
d) Expand, surfactant

User Jeschwar
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1 Answer

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Final answer:

The tension in the walls of the alveoli is a result of the membrane tissue and a liquid containing a surfactant. The surfactant prevents small alveoli from collapsing and large alveoli from expanding too much by reducing surface tension. This property is unique to surfactants and not shared by detergents.

Step-by-step explanation:

The tension in the walls of the alveoli results from the membrane tissue and a liquid on the walls of the alveoli containing a long lipoprotein that acts as a surfactant (a surface-tension reducing substance). The need for the surfactant results from the tendency of small alveoli to collapse and the air to fill into the larger alveoli making them even larger.

During inhalation, the lipoprotein molecules are pulled apart and the wall tension increases as the radius increases (increased surface tension). During exhalation, the molecules slide back together and the surface tension decreases, helping to prevent a collapse of the alveoli. The surfactant therefore serves to change the wall tension so that small alveoli don't collapse and large alveoli are prevented from expanding too much.

This tension change is a unique property of these surfactants, and is not shared by detergents (which simply lower surface tension).

User Smencer
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