Acrimonious
Scholar
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2002
- Messages
- 111
Breathing is basically controlled by 3 reflexes.
1) The reflex that makes you exhale when your lungs are full.
2) The reflex that makes you inhale when they are empty.
3) The reflex that makes you exhale when your lungs contain too much CO2.
The first 2 are to prevent you from blowing up or collapsing your lungs.
The third is a little weird... your body does not actually ever check to see if the air you're breathing contains oxygen. Oxygen is so plentiful, your body just assumes it's always going to have enough as long as it keeps breathing.
This causes problems in situations with carbon monoxide, inert gasses, and heavy gasses. Your body really doesn't care if it's getting oxygen... only that your CO2 level isn't too high. You will go on breathing gases with 0% oxygen (with minor symptoms like headache and fatigue) until you pass out and eventually die.
This site details Carbon Monoxide poisoning quite well. Note that none of the symptoms include gasping for air or choking.
This site explains the hazards of cryogenic liquids. This is a problem for people who work with chemical tank trucks and train cars, because even a small amount of these liquids will evaporate into large volumes of gas that displace breathable air:
1) The reflex that makes you exhale when your lungs are full.
2) The reflex that makes you inhale when they are empty.
3) The reflex that makes you exhale when your lungs contain too much CO2.
The first 2 are to prevent you from blowing up or collapsing your lungs.
The third is a little weird... your body does not actually ever check to see if the air you're breathing contains oxygen. Oxygen is so plentiful, your body just assumes it's always going to have enough as long as it keeps breathing.
This causes problems in situations with carbon monoxide, inert gasses, and heavy gasses. Your body really doesn't care if it's getting oxygen... only that your CO2 level isn't too high. You will go on breathing gases with 0% oxygen (with minor symptoms like headache and fatigue) until you pass out and eventually die.
This site details Carbon Monoxide poisoning quite well. Note that none of the symptoms include gasping for air or choking.
This site explains the hazards of cryogenic liquids. This is a problem for people who work with chemical tank trucks and train cars, because even a small amount of these liquids will evaporate into large volumes of gas that displace breathable air:
Asphyxiation Hazard
When cryogenic liquids form a gas, the gas is very cold and usually heavier than air. This cold, heavy gas does not disperse very well and can accumulate near the floor. Even if the gas is non-toxic, it displaces air. When there is not enough air or oxygen, asphyxiation and death can occur. Oxygen deficiency is a serious hazard in enclosed or confined spaces.
Small amounts of liquid can evaporate into very large volumes of gas. For example, one litre of liquid nitrogen vapourizes to 695 litres of nitrogen gas when warmed to room temperature (21°C).