Content deleted Content added
Iridescent (talk | contribs) m →Main results of Haldane’s work: Cleanup and typo fixing, typo(s) fixed: ’s → 's |
|||
Line 70:
* [[File:From Haldane's Book - Figure-1 N2 Saturation.jpg|thumb |The rate of saturation of any part of the body with nitrogen]] The rate of solubility of nitrogen per unit mass of tissue, varies greatly in different parts of the body, hence, after a sudden rise in air pressure, varies correspondingly.
* If the pressure is rapidly diminished to normal after exposure to saturation in compressed air, the venous blood will give off the whole of its excess of dissolved nitrogen during its passage to the lungs. If gas bubbles are formed in consequence of too rapid decompression, they will increase in size by diffusion into them, and thus cause blocking of small vessels. In order to avoid the risk of bubbles being formed during decompression, the decompression should be slow, and the rate of blood circulation can be increased considerably by muscular exertion.
* [[File:Haldane's Desat of N2 with different parts of the body with half-sat in 5-10-20-40-75 minutes.jpg|thumb
* Diving period:
:* For short diving periods of less than seven to eight minutes with no repetitive dive: Haldane's experiments on goats showed that sudden decompression in less than a minute after exposures up to four minutes at {{convert|75|psi|bar|abbr=on}}, equivalent to {{convert|42|m|ft}} of sea water, goats did not develop any symptoms, even when exposures were raised to six minutes in some cases. This coincides with reports at that time from the Mediterranean of skilled Greek divers, diving to {{convert|30|fathom|m}} who, should their gear become entangled on the bottom, will cut their air-pipe and line, and blow themselves up to the surface in less than a minute.{{Citation needed|date=May 2015}}
|