Edexcel GCSE Biology (1BI0)

1.5 Transport in cells

Edexcel GCSE Biology 1BI0 topic 1.5 covers the three ways substances move into and out of cells — diffusion, osmosis and active transport — and the surface area to volume ratio that decides whether diffusion alone is enough. The 1BI0 papers test the same handful of scenarios on rotation: oxygen crossing into the blood at the alveolus, water moving in or out of a plant or red blood cell, and ions / amino acids / glucose being pulled into a cell against the gradient. Once you can sort each scenario into 'down the gradient, no energy' (diffusion + osmosis) or 'up the gradient, energy from respiration' (active transport), and quote the Edexcel mark-scheme triggers verbatim, you can pick up every available mark on this topic.

Why this matters

Every cell is a partially-permeable bag. Substances need to get in and out — but the cell membrane doesn't just let everything cross freely. Small uncharged molecules (oxygen, CO₂, water) can move across by themselves, driven by concentration differences. Larger or charged molecules (glucose, ions, amino acids) need help — they cross via specific transport proteins, and sometimes the cell has to pump them against their natural flow using energy from respiration. This single piece of biology underlies almost every later topic in 1BI0: how the lungs absorb oxygen, how the small intestine absorbs glucose and amino acids, how root hair cells take up minerals, how a kidney concentrates urine. Master diffusion / osmosis / active transport and the rest of GCSE Biology suddenly makes mechanistic sense.

How to learn this topic

Build on what you already know

  • Edexcel 1BI0 1.1–1.4: cell structure and the cell membrane as the boundary that controls what enters and leaves the cell.
  • KS3: particles in liquids and gases move randomly; substances spread from where they're concentrated to where they're not.
  • Edexcel 1BI0 9.x: aerobic respiration in mitochondria releases the energy (as ATP) cells need.
  1. Start with diffusion — random movement of particles, net flow high to low.
  2. Then osmosis — special case of diffusion, but only of WATER across a partially permeable membrane.
  3. Then active transport — the exception that proves the rule: against the gradient, needs energy from respiration, uses carrier proteins.
  4. Compare all three side by side so you never confuse them in an exam.
  5. Finish with surface area to volume ratio — the reason small organisms can diffuse, but large organisms need lungs / gills / circulation.

Key terms

diffusion
The net movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. A passive process — no energy required. Continues until concentrations are equal (equilibrium). (Edexcel wants 'molecules move from high to low concentration' and 'until concentrations are equal / equilibrium'. Stating just 'particles move' loses the mark.)
osmosis
The movement of water across a partially permeable membrane from a region of higher water concentration to a region of lower water concentration. (Three required elements: 'water', 'partially permeable membrane', and direction stated by water concentration (high → low). Missing any one usually loses the mark.)
active transport
The movement of a substance against a concentration gradient (from low to high) using energy from respiration (ATP) and carrier proteins in the cell membrane. (Edexcel expects FOUR features for full credit: 'active transport', 'against the concentration gradient', 'requires energy (from respiration)', 'carrier proteins'.)
concentration gradient
A difference in concentration of a substance between two regions — the driver of diffusion and the barrier that active transport has to push against. (If asked 'in which direction does diffusion happen', the marking phrase is 'down the concentration gradient' (high to low).)
partially permeable membrane
A membrane that lets some substances through but not others — typically lets small molecules (like water) pass but blocks larger or charged solutes (like sugar, salt ions). Cell membranes are partially permeable.
turgid
The firm state of a plant cell when full of water — the cell membrane is pushed against the cell wall, creating turgor pressure that keeps the plant upright. (Edexcel wants 'cell becomes turgid / turgor pressure increases' for a plant cell taking up water. Don't write 'inflated' or 'puffed up'.)
plasmolysis
The state of a plant cell after losing water by osmosis — the cytoplasm shrinks away from the cell wall and the plant wilts. (Distinguish 'plasmolysed' (plant cell, has wall) from 'crenated' (animal cell, shrivelled).)
lysis
Bursting of an animal cell that has taken up too much water by osmosis. The cell membrane cannot withstand the pressure (no cell wall to support it). (Animal cells lyse in pure water. Plant cells don't — the cell wall prevents bursting.)
carrier protein
A protein embedded in the cell membrane that binds a specific substance and moves it across the membrane — used in active transport (with energy from respiration) to move substances against the concentration gradient. (Edexcel rubric for active transport always lists 'carrier proteins' as one of the four required points.)
exchange surface
A region of an organism specially adapted for transferring substances between the inside of the body and the outside (or between body compartments). Examples: alveoli, intestinal villi, root hairs, gills. (Three standard adaptations: large surface area, thin membrane, maintained concentration gradient (e.g. by blood supply).)
surface area to volume ratio (SA:V)
The ratio of an object's surface area to its volume. Small objects have a high SA:V; large objects have a low SA:V. Determines whether diffusion alone is enough. (As size increases, volume grows proportionally faster than surface area, so SA:V decreases — that's the marking-phrase reason large organisms need transport systems.)
root hair cell
A specialised plant cell at the root tip with a long thin extension that increases surface area for absorbing water and mineral ions from the soil. Contains many mitochondria for active transport of ions. (Examiners want 'many mitochondria → ATP → active transport of mineral ions against gradient' as the explicit chain.)
alveolus
A tiny air sac in the lung where gas exchange happens. Walls are one cell thick, total surface area is huge, and capillaries deliver/remove blood right next to the wall.

Notes

Diffusion — high to low, no energy needed

Diffusion is the net movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. The particles are moving randomly all the time — but if there are more of them on one side than the other, the net result is a flow from where there are more to where there are fewer. Particles continue to move until concentrations are equal — the system reaches equilibrium.

Key features:

  • Happens to particles in a gas OR particles dissolved in a liquid.
  • Driven by the concentration gradient (the difference in concentration).
  • No energy from respiration is needed — it's a passive process.
  • Continues until the concentrations are equal (equilibrium).

Factors that increase the rate of diffusion: steeper concentration gradient, larger surface area, shorter diffusion distance, higher temperature (particles move faster).

Exam examples that show up on 1BI0:

  • Oxygen diffuses from the air in the alveoli (high concentration) into the blood (lower concentration).
  • Carbon dioxide diffuses out of the blood (high) into the alveoli (low) — the reverse direction.
  • Glucose diffuses from the small intestine into the blood — at least when intestinal concentration is higher than blood concentration.

The Edexcel marking phrase you must use: 'molecules move from high to low concentration' and 'until concentrations are equal/equilibrium'.

Osmosis — diffusion of water, with one rule

Osmosis is the movement of water molecules across a partially permeable membrane, from a region of higher water concentration (a dilute solution) to a region of lower water concentration (a concentrated solution). Edexcel marks both ways of phrasing it — by water concentration OR by solute concentration — as long as the direction is consistent.

Why 'partially permeable' matters: a normal partially-permeable cell membrane lets water through but not the dissolved solutes (sugar, salt). So water moves to balance the concentrations, but the solute can't follow.

Three scenarios you need to know:

  • Animal cell in pure water — water rushes in by osmosis. The cell swells. With no cell wall to stop it, the cell eventually bursts (called lysis). Red blood cells placed in pure water famously do this.
  • Animal cell in concentrated solution — water leaves the cell by osmosis because the outside has lower water concentration than the cytoplasm. Water passes through the partially permeable membrane and the cell shrinks / shrivels / crenates.
  • Plant cell in pure water — water enters the cell by osmosis (moving from high to low water concentration through the partially permeable membrane). The cell wall stops the cell bursting, so the cell becomes turgid and turgor pressure increases.
  • Plant cell in concentrated solution — water rushes out, the cytoplasm shrinks away from the cell wall (plasmolysis) and the plant wilts.

Osmosis still needs no energy from respiration — it's passive, driven by water concentration differences.

Active transport — against the gradient, with energy

Sometimes a cell needs to move substances AGAINST their concentration gradient — from where there's less of them to where there's more. Diffusion can't do this. Instead the cell uses active transport:

  • Specific carrier proteins in the membrane bind the substance.
  • Energy from respiration (in the form of ATP, made by mitochondria) is used to power the carrier protein.
  • The carrier protein moves the substance across the membrane against the concentration gradient.

Edexcel-specific exam examples:

  • Mineral ions (nitrates, phosphates) are absorbed from the soil into root hair cells. The soil has a low concentration of these ions; the root hair cell already has a high concentration. So the plant uses active transport — which is why root hair cells have lots of mitochondria (to make ATP for this).
  • Glucose absorption in the small intestine: most glucose moves into the blood by diffusion, but when blood glucose is already higher than gut glucose (after a previous meal has been absorbed), active transport is used — against the concentration gradient, requiring energy, via carrier proteins — so the cell can still take up every last molecule.
  • Amino acid absorption in the small intestine: active transport moves substances against the concentration gradient; diffusion only occurs down a concentration gradient; active transport uses energy from respiration; carrier proteins in the membrane are used.

Comparing the three — the exam table

| | Diffusion | Osmosis | Active transport |

|---|---|---|---|

| What moves | particles (gas or dissolved) | water only | dissolved substance (e.g. ions, glucose, amino acids) |

| Direction | high → low conc. | high → low water conc. (through partially permeable membrane) | low → high conc. (AGAINST gradient) |

| Membrane needed? | not necessarily | yes — partially permeable | yes — with carrier proteins |

| Energy from respiration? | no | no | yes (ATP) |

The single most important question to answer in any 1BI0 scenario: 'Is the substance moving high→low or low→high?' If high→low, it's diffusion (or osmosis if it's water). If low→high, it must be active transport — which means energy from respiration AND a carrier protein.

Surface area to volume ratio — why size matters

A tiny organism (a single bacterium) has a huge surface area compared to its volume — every cell is close to the outside, so diffusion alone is fast enough to get oxygen in and waste out.

As an organism gets bigger, volume grows faster than surface area. Quickly the surface becomes too small (relative to all the cells inside it) for diffusion alone to keep them supplied. That's why large organisms have:

  • Specialised exchange surfaces (lungs, gills, intestinal villi, root hairs) — large surface area, thin membranes, good blood supply.
  • Transport systems (blood, xylem, phloem) — to carry materials over long distances from the exchange surface to every cell.

A worked example: a 1 cm cube has a surface area of 6 cm² and a volume of 1 cm³ — ratio 6:1. A 2 cm cube has a surface area of 24 cm² and a volume of 8 cm³ — ratio 3:1. The same logic applies to whole organisms: as size doubles, the SA:V ratio roughly halves.

How exchange surfaces are adapted

Three adaptations always increase the rate of diffusion. Every exchange surface in the body uses at least two:

  1. Large surface area — folds, villi, alveoli, root hairs.
  2. Thin membrane / short diffusion path — alveoli walls are one cell thick.
  3. Maintained concentration gradient — good blood supply takes substances away, breathing brings fresh air in.

Exam tips

  • Edexcel diffusion wording: 'molecules move from high to low concentration' + 'down the concentration gradient' + 'until concentrations are equal / equilibrium'. Hit all three for full marks.
  • Osmosis questions on 1BI0: name the membrane as 'partially permeable' and the movement as 'water from high water concentration to low water concentration'. All three elements are required for the mark.
  • Active transport questions: name ALL FOUR Edexcel features — 'active transport' + 'against the concentration gradient' + 'requires energy (from respiration)' + 'carrier proteins'.
  • On root hair cell questions, the marking chain is: 'many mitochondria → make ATP → for active transport of mineral ions against the gradient'. Skipping any step loses marks.
  • Animal cell in concentrated solution: write 'outside has lower water concentration than cytoplasm → water leaves by osmosis → through partially permeable membrane → cell shrinks/shrivels/crenates'.
  • Plant cell in pure water: 'water enters by osmosis → through partially permeable membrane → cell becomes turgid → turgor pressure increases'.
  • For surface area to volume ratio, the marking phrase is 'volume increases proportionally faster than surface area' — that's the reason, not 'small things have more surface area'.

Mark-scheme phrasing

Common misconceptions

Worked example

Question:

Answer:

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between diffusion and osmosis?

Diffusion is the net movement of particles (gas or dissolved) from high to low concentration. Osmosis is specifically the movement of WATER molecules across a PARTIALLY PERMEABLE MEMBRANE from a region of higher water concentration to a region of lower water concentration. Both are passive (no energy needed). Think of osmosis as a special case of diffusion that only applies to water and only when there's a membrane in the way.

Why does active transport need energy when diffusion doesn't?

Diffusion just lets particles wander randomly down a concentration gradient — the energy comes from the particles' own kinetic energy. Active transport works AGAINST the gradient: it pumps particles from low to high concentration, which is the opposite of what they'd do naturally. Pushing something the 'wrong' way requires work, which costs energy. The cell pays that cost using ATP made by respiration in mitochondria — which is why cells doing lots of active transport (root hair cells, gut lining cells, kidney cells) are packed with mitochondria.

Why doesn't a plant cell burst in pure water like an animal cell does?

Both cells take up water by osmosis. The difference is the cell wall. Animal cells have only a flexible cell membrane, so when too much water enters, the membrane stretches and eventually ruptures (lysis). Plant cells have a tough cellulose cell wall outside the membrane. As water enters, the cell becomes turgid — the membrane presses against the cell wall, but the wall is rigid enough to hold its shape. This turgor pressure is exactly what keeps non-woody plants upright. Lose the water and the cells become flaccid → the plant wilts.

How is a root hair cell adapted for its function?

Three adaptations: (1) Long thin extension — increases the surface area in contact with the soil for water and mineral absorption. (2) Many mitochondria — provide ATP for active transport of mineral ions against the concentration gradient (the soil has fewer ions than the cell already does). (3) Thin cell wall — speeds up water uptake. The exam-marking chain you want is 'extension → surface area → faster absorption' and 'mitochondria → ATP → active transport → minerals taken up against gradient'.

Why does an organism's size affect how it exchanges gases?

Tiny organisms like amoebae or single-celled bacteria have a high surface area to volume ratio — their surface is large relative to the small amount of cytoplasm inside, so diffusion across the surface is fast enough to supply every part of the cell. As organisms get bigger, volume grows proportionally faster than surface area — so the SA:V ratio decreases. Eventually the inner cells are too far from the surface for diffusion alone to deliver oxygen quickly enough. That's why bigger organisms have specialised exchange surfaces (lungs, gills) AND a transport system (blood) to carry substances over longer distances.

What's the difference between turgid, flaccid and plasmolysed plant cells?

TURGID: the cell is full of water, cytoplasm pressed against the cell wall, the plant is upright and firm. This is the healthy state — the Edexcel marking phrase is 'cell becomes turgid / turgor pressure increases'. FLACCID: the cell has lost some water, the cytoplasm is no longer pressed firmly against the wall, the plant starts to wilt. PLASMOLYSED: the cell has lost so much water that the cytoplasm and cell membrane have pulled away from the cell wall — the cell is severely dehydrated. All three states involve water movement by osmosis — only the direction and amount differ.