thumb|Effect of different solutions on Red blood cell|red blood cells thumb|Micrographs of osmotic pressure on red blood cells
thumb|Effect of different solutions on Red blood cell|red blood cells thumb|Micrographs of osmotic pressure on red blood cells
In chemical biology, tonicity is a measure of the effective osmotic pressure gradient; the water potential of two solutions separated by a partially-permeable cell membrane. Tonicity depends on the relative concentration of selective membrane-impermeable solutes across a cell membrane which determines the direction and extent of osmotic flux. It is commonly used when describing the swelling-versus-shrinking response of cells immersed in an external solution.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).