SCUBA
(Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus) diving. This interest can be
harnessed to teach an exciting lesson on gas laws and their importance to SCUBA
diving. Note: SCUBA diving is a sport filled with many inherent dangers and
requires specialized training and equipment. Do not attempt any diving activity
without proper training and certification, you wouldn't jump in a car and drive it or a truck with out the right training as it wouldn't be safe the same goes here if you follow your training yes it very safe so safe that there is less injury's than in football .
The dry air
we breathe every day is composed of 21% oxygen, 78% nitrogen, and 1% other
gases. Its average pressure at sea level is 1 bar. For SCUBA, this
air is compressed into a SCUBA cylinder or "tank." SCUBA tanks can be
made of steel or aluminum, each of these materials has pros and cons that
impact the diver's decision on which type to use & weight to use.
The
compressed air in the tank is delivered to the diver through a regulator, which
reduces the pressure from the tank to match the ambient pressure. At the
surface, ambient pressure is 1 bar and it increases by 1 bar for every 10 m in
depth through which a diver descends. Note: Other gas mixes such as nitrox (an
oxygen/nitrogen mixture with a greater amount of oxygen than air), heliox (a
helium and oxygen mixture), and trimix (a mixture of oxygen, nitrogen, and
helium) or even pure oxygen are also used for technical diving, but those mixes
go beyond the scope of recreational diving and have depth limits.
A rule of SCUBA diving with every agency is to "never hold your breath." A
look at Boyle's law explains why this rule exists. When a diver inhales air
from a SCUBA tank, the air that enters the diver's lungs is at ambient
pressure. If a diver inhales from the tank on the surface, the pressure in his
lungs will be at 1 bar. If he inhales air from his tank at a depth of 30 m, the pressure in his lungs will be 4 bar (30 m / 10 m/bar = 3 bar from the
water plus 1 bar from the air at the surface = 4 bar). Assuming the diver's
lung volume is 1 L, we can complete the left side of the equation for Boyle's
law. If a diver at 30 m has 1 L of air at a pressure of 4 bar in his lungs and
ascends to the surface while holding his breath, we see that the diver's lung
volume would increase to 4 times its typical volume. This increase will result
in severe damage to the lungs, which can be fatal. The increase of volume with
a decrease in pressure can also be seen in by a diver the gas bubbles exhaled as
he rises to the surface. The exhaled air bubbles are small at depth and
increase in size as they travel towards the surface. SCUBA instructors sometimes
demonstrate this principle to their students by bringing a plastic bottle with
a cap along on a dive. As the pressure increases with depth, the gas bubbles
trapped in the bottle decrease in volume, shrinking the bottle.
See the photo the gas bubbles exhaled as he rises to the surface.
Boyle's law
also has implications on the amount of air used from the tank with each breath.
At 10 m (2 bar) twice as many oxygen and nitrogen molecules are inhaled with
each breath. Deeper dives require closer monitoring of a diver's air supply
because the diver uses his supply more rapidly. Another question students often
ask in this discussion is, "How is the SCUBA tank impacted by these
changes in pressure?" Because the tank is a rigid container, its volume is
not altered with the change in external pressure nor is the gas it contains
affected.
A SCUBA tank
is a rigid container, therefore its volume is held constant. When a tank is
filled, additional oxygen and nitrogen molecules are added to the tank and the
pressure and temperature increase. If a tank is filled rapidly to 200 bar, its
temperature can rise to as much as 150° F (65.6° C). Since all gas laws use absolute
temperatures, this will then have to be left for some time to cool and re
filled as once cooled the pressure will drop as the molecules reform tighter
patterns.
Interesting
phenomenon for divers using dry suits. A dry suit is a watertight garment worn
by divers (typically over warm clothing) that serves to keep the diver warm by
trapping a layer of air between the diver and the suit. Dry suits are usually
worn in cold air and/or water temperatures.
During the
dive, divers can add and remove air from their dry suits through their
regulators. This allows them to adjust for changes in their suits' gas volumes
due to pressure changes during assent and descent. If the air temperature is colder
than the water temperature when the divers emerge at the end of the dive, they
can become "vacuum sealed" in their suits due to the decrease in
their suits' gas volumes. Divers can add air to the suits from their tanks, or
unzip their suits, to release the "squeeze."
Also known
as Dalton's law of partial pressures, this law states that the total pressure
of a gas mixture is equal to the sum of the partial pressures of its component
gases. As mentioned earlier, dry air is a mixture composed of 21% oxygen and
78% nitrogen. Both of these gases can have negative impacts on a diver at high
pressures. Low partial pressures of oxygen are also dangerous but are only an
issue for technical diving, which is beyond the scope of this discussion.
Oxygen can
become toxic to a diver when the partial pressure of the oxygen breathed is
above 1.6 atm. Symptoms of oxygen toxicity can include changes in vision,
dizziness/vertigo, and seizures, all of which can be problematic for a diver
and can lead to death. To calculate at what depth a diver might begin to
experience symptoms of oxygen toxicity when diving with compressed air, we need
to first calculate at what air pressure would the partial pressure of oxygen be
equal to 1.6 atm or greater.
Nitrogen
narcosis can result from a diver's exposure to high partial pressures of
nitrogen during her dive. Symptoms of nitrogen narcosis most closely resemble
those of alcohol intoxication. These symptoms appear more gradually than those
of oxygen toxicity but also increase with depth.
Henry's law
states that the solubility of a liquid is directly proportional to the partial
pressure of the gas above the liquid. The implication of this law for SCUBA
diving is that as depth increases (and therefore pressure) the amount of a gas
dissolved in the diver's blood will also increase. Oxygen is consumed by the
body's physiological processes, but nitrogen is physiologically inert. The
longer that a diver remains at depth, the more nitrogen is dissolved in his
blood.
During long
dives a considerable amount of nitrogen can be dissolved in the diver's
bloodstream. When the diver ascends the partial pressure of nitrogen drops, and
due to Henry's law the dissolved nitrogen begins to come out of solution.
Nitrogen bubbles form in the diver's bloodstream, which can lead to
decompression sickness (DCS).(Mark powell- Deco for divers)
The symptoms
of DCS and their severity depend on where in the diver's body the bubbles
migrate and can range from soreness in the joints or blisters under the skin to
death. Treatment for DCS typically involves several sessions in a hyperbaric
oxygen chamber. In their training, divers are taught to stay within dive time
and depth limits to minimize their risk of DCS and to ascend slowly from every
dive.
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