Yes
Exhaled air has more carbon dioxide and less oxygen than does inhaled air.
Inhaled air contains a greater volume of oxygen than carbon dioxide. Exhaled air is the opposite, since after the exchange of gases in the lungs the carbon dioxide in the blood is transferred into the lungs. Exhaled air contains a greater volume of carbon dioxide than oxygen. Also, there is more water vapour in exhaled air than inhaled air.
Exhaled air has less oxygen than inhaled air.Exhaled air has more carbon dioxide than inhaled air.Exhaled air is warmer that inhaled air.Maybe the first 2 are redundant, but I think that should work!
Because the body has used the oxygen in the air to oxidize the nutrients you eat, this process combines the oxygen that you inhaled with carbon which makes up part of the nutrients you eat to form a poisonous gas "carbon-dioxide" which is then transported back to the lungs and exhaled along with moisture.
No. for the right and the night shall ride on to the glorious banquet of truth.
Inhaled air contains more oxygen than exhaled air because the cells have not yet used that oxyginated air.
Inhaled air contains more oxygen than carbon dioxide and other gases. Exhaled air contains mostly carbon dioxide as the inhaled oxygen was used up to create energy. Waste carbon dioxide (and other unwanted gases) is then let out of the body and the cycle continues. :)Gas exchangeGas% in inhaled air% in exhaled airOxygen2116Carbon dioxide0.044Nitrogen7979
Exhaled air has more carbon dioxide and less oxygen than does inhaled air.
Inhaled air is richer in oxygen than exhaled air.
Inhaled air contains a greater volume of oxygen than carbon dioxide. Exhaled air is the opposite, since after the exchange of gases in the lungs the carbon dioxide in the blood is transferred into the lungs. Exhaled air contains a greater volume of carbon dioxide than oxygen. Also, there is more water vapour in exhaled air than inhaled air.
yes it is the inhaled air is 0.04 %, whereas, of the exhaled air is 4 % (100 times) more
Exhaled air has less oxygen than inhaled air.Exhaled air has more carbon dioxide than inhaled air.Exhaled air is warmer that inhaled air.Maybe the first 2 are redundant, but I think that should work!
Carbon dioxide (CO2).
Because the body has used the oxygen in the air to oxidize the nutrients you eat, this process combines the oxygen that you inhaled with carbon which makes up part of the nutrients you eat to form a poisonous gas "carbon-dioxide" which is then transported back to the lungs and exhaled along with moisture.
Exhaled air should have less oxygen since it is carrying the CO2 from your lungs in the first place. A way of showing... there may be
The nitrogen is not absorbed in your body via lungs. So the amount of nitrogen in inhaled and exhaled air has to be same. Nitrogen protects your body from the harmful effects of 100 % oxygen.
Yes, the air leaving the lungs has accumulated some of the moisture on the alveolar surfaces (inside of the lungs), this leaves with the exhaled air, making it more humid (more water vapour) than inhaled air.Aside from this and the higher temperature of exhaled air, it is pretty similar to that being inhaled. The concentrations of carbon dioxide and oxygen have altered also, more carbon dioxide leaves than enters, and more oxygen enters than leaves. This is due to removing carbon dioxide from the blood and taking in oxygen to remove metabolic waste and fuel metabolic processes respectively.Note that not all the oxygen inhaled is absorbed into the blood, and that the exhaled air contains other gases found naturally in the air such as minute proportions of the noble gases and nitrogen.