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Main Page › Academics & Learning › Science Courses
 

Reverse Osmosis

 
Author: Peter Vermeeren

Reverse osmosis is something that sounds as if it is right out of the science books in a local high school. While many of the less scientific people of this world never stop to think about the process of reverse osmosis, it is a very real entity of our daily lives through the process of water filtering.

When two volumes of liquid (in this case, water) or other solvents part ways by a membrane called a semi-permeable membrane, the liquid will naturally flow from the side of the low solute concentration to the side of the higher one. The way the flow is stopped with guaranteed success is when the side of the higher solute concentration is experiencing some level of exterior pressure. The external pressure then cause something that is then considered to be going through the process of reverse osmosis.

Osmotic pressure is something that occurs only when one side of the system containing the solute molecules experiences the external pressure. This action causes the process of osmotic pressure.

Considered by scientists and other people who have an interest in osmosis is another factor. Osmosis is a process which is called by many the reversible thermodynamic process. This process is really pretty simple and the explanation in layman terms is as follows. The process, reverse osmosis can be stopped or changed at any time whatsoever just by proper control of the right external introduction. By applying pressure to the right point, the direction of the flow of water or another liquid is then reversed rather than continuing through the flow of the membrane.

Reverse osmosis is often used in water filtering and purification systems in order to purify the water and keep the water clean and free of toxins which most people would not want to experience in their drinking water. The process of reverse osmosis is completely opposite from the diffusion process.

Often diffusion and reverse osmosis are, in fact, confused. However, the diffusion concept is irreversible and the process of reverse osmosis is as the name suggests, reversible.

Reverse osmosis can be studied at length using the online libraries available. Keyword searches bring more individual product information for filtering systems than for explanation of the reverse osmosis process itself. Find out what you need to know for whatever purpose through the extensive research available in the many libraries online. Reverse osmosis is worth researching further if you have the time and the interest to do it.

Author Bio:
Peter Vermeeren is an expert on this subject. Peter has written several articles in the past on this topic.
You can search for this article using: social sciences, health colorado at denver & health sciences, 10 social sciences
 
 
 

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