ozmotikus
Ozmotikus (osmotic) refers to phenomena related to osmosis, the movement of a solvent, usually water, across a semipermeable membrane in response to differences in solute concentration. The term derives from the Greek osmos, meaning "push" or impulse, and is used across biology, chemistry, and medicine to describe processes governed by solute gradients that produce net water flow.
Mechanism and osmotic pressure: Osmosis occurs when a membrane allows solvent passage but restricts most solutes.
Osmolality and osmolarity: Osmolality (osmolality) measures solute particles per kilogram of solvent; osmolarity measures per liter
Clinical and physiological relevance: Osmotic processes underlie plant cell turgor, animal cell volume regulation, kidney function,