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Mass Transport in Biological Systems

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Can be achieved by both convection and diffusion. ... skin, buccal mucosa, cell membrane... B. Amsden. CHEE 340. C. distance, x. L. Co. CL. Example ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mass Transport in Biological Systems


1
Mass Transport in Biological Systems
  • OBJECTIVES
  • To discuss how to model mass transport processes
    within the body.
  • OUTLINE
  • review Ficks first and second laws
  • consider diffusion (reaction convection)
  • apply these concepts to solute movement across
    cell membranes/capillary walls, protein
    adsorption

2
Mass Transport
  • Can be achieved by both convection and diffusion.
    Mass transport is measured in terms of flux (
    amount of material crossing a unit area normal to
    the direction of transport per unit time).
  • Most biological systems are dilute, so v is
    assumed to be the solvent velocity, and the
    transport of each component through the solvent
    can be studied as if the mixture was binary.

3
Ficks Laws of diffusion
  • strictly valid only for dilute solutions

Ficks 1st law
slab
cylinder
Ficks 2nd law
sphere
4
Diffusion across a membrane Steady-state
  • skin, buccal mucosa, cell membrane

Co
C
CL
L
distance, x
5
Example
  • Scopolamine is available in a transdermal patch
    for the treatment of motion sickness. You are
    involved in the design of a new patch for this
    drug and need to first determine the diffusion
    coefficient of the drug in the outer layer of the
    skin. To do this, you set up a diffusion cell
    using excised human skin (thickness 100 ?m).
    The donor solution has a constant scopolamine
    concentration of 4.6 mg/ml. The concentration in
    the receptor solution is maintained at a
    concentration very much smaller than 4.6 mg/ml.
    The skin section you use is circular with a
    radius of 0.5 cm. The amount of the drug that
    has passed through the skin versus time is given
    in the following Table. Using this data and the
    fact that scopolamine has a partition coefficient
    (skin/water) of 17.4, calculate the diffusion
    coefficient of scopolamine in the skin.
  • Total mass of scopolamine transported versus time

6
Diffusion Reaction The Krogh Capillary
  • Consider oxygen delivery to tissue at
    steady-state. The oxygen is also being consumed
    in the tissue. This consumption is modeled using
    Michaelis-Menten kinetics.

r
z
2Ro
2Rc
7
O2 Delivery to Tissue
8
Example
  • Given that the reaction rate of oxygen in
    skeletal muscle is 10-7 mol/(cm3 s), the
    capillary radius is 1.5 to 4 ?m, the diffusion
    coefficient of oxygen in muscle is 2(10-5) cm2/s,
    and the concentration of oxygen in plasma is
    4.05(10-8) mol/cm3, determine the maximum
    intercapillary radius. If the total oxygen
    content in the blood entering the capillary is 2
    (10-3)M and during exercise the average flow rate
    in the blood is 0.2 cm/s, determine the capillary
    distance at which the concentration of oxygen in
    the blood is zero.

9
Unsteady-State Diffusion
  • Examples include injection of a drug into the
    muscle or sub-cutaneously followed by absorption
    into the blood stream, and the initial stages of
    protein adsorption to a biomaterial.
  • Consider protein adsorption

C
at t 0, C Co
x 0
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