Abstract

The potential difference between two solutions of the same 1:1 electrolyte bathing an ion exchange membrane has been calculated as the sum of the following components: (a) a Donnan potential at each membrane-solution interface, (b) a diffusion potential within the membrane phase, and (c) a diffusion potential in the unstirred layer on each side of the membrane. For a highly charged ion exchange membrane with at least one surface in contact with a dilute solution, calculated transmembrane potential differences are extremely sensitive to the assumed thickness of the unstirred layers. This sensitivity to unstirred layer thickness is primarily due to changes in the Donnan components of the potential difference. By this approach, it was possible to fit membrane potential data from Gunn and Curran (1971, Biophys. J. 11:559) for a range of bathing solution concentrations from 0.0016 to 4.0 M. If no effort was made to account for the modification of the Donnan potentials by the presence of unstirred layers, the data appeared incompatible with an electrodiffusion equation description. Suggestions for a more stringent experimental test and a brief discussion of possible implications for electrical measurements on fresh-water giant algal cells are presented.

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