diffusion - the natural movement of particles from high to low density. oxygen dissolves in a film of liquid water lining the alveoli (tiny air sacs in the lungs) and the wall of the alveoli and wall of the capillary (each 1 cell thick) into the blood in the capillary. the oxygen is moving from the high concentration of oxygen in the lung to the low concentration of oxygen in the blood. this low concentration is maintained in the blood since it continuously flows away and is replaced by oxygen poor blood. the high concentration of oxygen in the lungs is of course maintained by breathing in fresh air.
Oxygen moves into the lungs where it is absorbed into the bloodstream through tiny air sacs called alveoli.
The small sac-like structures in the lungs are called alveoli. This is where the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide occurs with the bloodstream, a process known as gas exchange. Oxygen diffuses from the alveoli into the bloodstream, while carbon dioxide moves from the bloodstream into the alveoli to be exhaled.
+++Osmosis
Oxygen moves from the lungs into the bloodstream through a process called diffusion. This occurs at the alveoli, which are small air sacs in the lungs where oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged with the blood. Oxygen diffuses from an area of high concentration in the alveoli to an area of lower concentration in the blood, facilitated by the difference in partial pressures.
This process is called gas exchange. In the lungs, oxygen enters the bloodstream through diffusion across the alveolar membrane, where it binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells for transportation to tissues.
Oxygen is the substance that moves from the bloodstream to the air via the lungs during respiration. This process occurs in the alveoli of the lungs where oxygen is exchanged for carbon dioxide.
The lungs are the primary organs that fill blood with oxygen. Oxygen from the air is inhaled into the lungs, where it moves into the bloodstream through tiny blood vessels called capillaries surrounding the lungs' air sacs.
Oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged in the lungs through a process called gas exchange. During inhalation, oxygen is taken in and diffuses into the bloodstream from the alveoli in the lungs. At the same time, carbon dioxide moves from the bloodstream into the alveoli to be exhaled during exhalation. This process occurs due to differences in partial pressure between the two gases in the lungs and the bloodstream.
+++Osmosis
Oxygen is moving by simple diffusion. It is going from a higher level of oxygen (air) to lower (blood).
Passive diffusion occurs in the alveoli of the lungs. Oxygen from inhaled air moves across the thin alveolar membrane into the bloodstream, while carbon dioxide moves from the bloodstream into the alveoli to be exhaled.
Oxygen moves through the body via the bloodstream, carried by red blood cells. It is inhaled into the lungs, where it diffuses from the alveoli into the bloodstream, and then transported to tissues and organs where it is exchanged for carbon dioxide to be exhaled.