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Oxygen after inhalation is absorbed by hemoglobin of blood in the lungs and from there it is distributed in the entire body through blood streams.
All gases diffuse to a homogenous phase.
Oxygen is inhaled through the mouth and nose, travels through the trachea and bronchi and into the lungs. From there it goes into the alveoli and diffuses through the capillaries. It attaches to haemoglobin in the blood.
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The gas we take in when we inhale is oxygen.
Inhaled oxygen diffuses through the walls of the alveoli in the lungs into the surrounding capillaries, where it binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells for transport to tissues in the body.
cells
yes
The three substances that can diffuse through a cell membrane are CO2, O2, AND H2O.
an oxygen molecule is inhaled and then goes through the blood
aerteries
Oxygen (O2)
Oxygen and carbon dioxide are moved to and from body tissues via the circulatory system. These materials diffuse through the cell membrane, and then diffuse through the capillary wall into or out of the bloodstream.
oxygen that is inhaled into the lungs is diffused through the small air sacs, called alveoli, into the bloodstream.
The humorus
AVEVOLIS
alveoli