Every time you inhale air, you take in 21% oxygen, 78% Nitrogen, 0.04% Carbon Dioxide and 0.96% other gases.
:)
Carbon monoxide is the substance that leads to a decrease in the amount of oxygen that blood can carry. When carbon monoxide is inhaled, it binds to hemoglobin in the blood more readily than oxygen, reducing the blood's ability to transport oxygen to tissues and organs.
air, which is a mix of several gasses
The percentage of oxygen in inhaled air by humans is approximately 21%. This oxygen is then absorbed by the lungs and transported by the blood to the cells where it is used for energy production in the body.
Oxygen needs to be compressed when stored in tanks to increase the amount that can be carried in a limited space. Compressing it allows for more oxygen to be stored at a higher pressure, making it easier to transport and use in medical settings or for industrial purposes.
Inhaled oxygen diffuses through the walls of the alveoli in the lungs, then into the bloodstream where it binds to hemoglobin in red blood cells for transportation to tissues and cells in the body.
effective expansion of the lungs and decrease the amount of oxygen that can be inhaled.
because inhale air is oxygen and due to that we stay alive
yes!
Nitrogen is not used by the body; oxygen is taken in and carbon dioxide and water goes out.
21% of the air we inhale is oxygen
Between 1/5 and 1/4 of the oxygen inhaled binds to hemoglobin in the blood, but despite that the amount of oxygen that remains in the body is actual 0. Oxygen enters as oxygen gas and leaves the body as carbon dioxide (mostly). Unless one is building up more tissue (as in a child growing) the movement of oxygen into the body is offset by an equal amount leaving the body. Similarly the net gain of water is also zero.a lot :P
Carbon monoxide is the substance that leads to a decrease in the amount of oxygen that blood can carry. When carbon monoxide is inhaled, it binds to hemoglobin in the blood more readily than oxygen, reducing the blood's ability to transport oxygen to tissues and organs.
Exhaled air contains 16% oxygen and 21% when inhaled.
The amount of carbon dioxide exhaled is always greater than the amount inhaled because part of the oxygen inhaled is converted into carbon dioxide by metabolic processes of digestion, while any carbon dioxide inhaled remains unchanged in the body and is always exhaled again.
Exhaled air, which has a slightly higher amount of carbon dioxide, is heavier than inhaled air.
About 21%
About 21%.