4-6 L of air for an average adult human being
6,000 mL
10ml
No. A spirometer can be used to measure the volume of breath a person can expire but it is impossible to expire your entire lung capacity. This is due to the "dead space" capacity that remains to stop the collapse of the alveoli. As the alveoli are spherical and lined with mucus if they collapse it would be impossble for them to be filled again and so some air must remain within them. It is, however, possible to estimate someone's total lung capacity from the spirometer reading.
2.46 moles
Not necessarily, but in general, yes.
Alveolar volume is lung capacity. Alveoli are the air sacs in the bronchioles. How much air the lungs hold during both inspiration and expiration is lung capacity which is alveolar volume. Hope this helps
Your total lung capacity is the total volume of the lung after maximum inspiration. (average 6 litres).
The TOTAL lung capacity of the average adult human is around 6 litres of air. However - only a fraction of the lungs capacity is used during normal breathing.
I was informed that it was about 75 to 80%. Right, wrong, or ?
It depends on your age, but 10 litres is a VERY good lung capacity for an adult. For a child, 10 litres seems ridiculous because the average is 2 litres.
Total lung volume equals Vital Capacity + Residual Volume.
total lung capacity of human body 6000cc normal human being uses 300cc to 500cc only
The lung capacity vary on the person's age, gender, where he lives and more. For example, if he lives in a smoke-free area his lung capacity is probably more. The average lung capacity for a human is 4-6 liters of air and the average lung capacity for a 10-11 year old is around 4 liters.
Adults have an internal lung area of 90m square, which is 40 times the external area of the body. you breathe about 13,500 liters of air a day y.to obtain oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from your body.
yes
by displacement...
10ml
gallons