Air and blood in a medical setting, such as dialysis are not supposed to mix. When blood and air mix, the clotting process begins to occur.
Air will not touch your blood until it is release to outside the skin. In most veins at least. Wren oxygen touches the blood, it turns red, but normally is blue. Oxygen may be circulating in your veins, but will not mix with the blood cells. The above is only half true. Oxygen mixes with your blood in the capillaries inside your lungs. The blood then transfers over to your arteries where it travels the body to deliver the oxygen to your muscles and other organs.
A gas burner in a gas-fired furnace mixes air and gas to create a combustible mixture. The burner nozzle releases gas, which mixes with air that is drawn in from the surrounding environment. This mixture is then ignited to produce heat for the furnace.
The air you breathe out contains a higher concentration of carbon dioxide and lower concentration of oxygen compared to the air you breathed in. This exhaled air is expelled from your lungs and can be taken up by plants during photosynthesis.
Carbon dioxide mixes with water in the blood to form carbonic acid through the action of the enzyme carbonic anhydrase. This reaction helps regulate the pH balance in the blood by maintaining the proper levels of carbonic acid.
As blood moves through the lungs, oxygen is exchanged for carbon dioxide. Oxygen diffuses from the air in the lungs into the blood, increasing the oxygen level in the blood. Conversely, carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the air in the lungs, decreasing the carbon dioxide level in the blood.
Carbon mixes with the rain water and when it falls, it wears out rocks. So it happens when the rain water mixes with the carbon from the air.
It mixes with clouds and create acid rain.
It mixes together with air.... <Maix2>
Nothing "happens". Well, other than what you said. The ammonia mixes with the air. And then diffusion, I guess.
It mixes with continental air and gradually becomes a continental air mass
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When a balloon pops, the gas inside rapidly escapes into the surrounding air due to the sudden release of pressure. The gas disperses and eventually mixes with the surrounding air.
Nothing
nothing
Air will not touch your blood until it is release to outside the skin. In most veins at least. Wren oxygen touches the blood, it turns red, but normally is blue. Oxygen may be circulating in your veins, but will not mix with the blood cells. The above is only half true. Oxygen mixes with your blood in the capillaries inside your lungs. The blood then transfers over to your arteries where it travels the body to deliver the oxygen to your muscles and other organs.
Blowing into a water bottle creates air pressure inside the bottle, which pushes the water out. This can create a bubbly or foamy effect as the air mixes with the water.
In the human body, air is brought into contact with blood in the lungs. This happens through the process of respiration, where oxygen from the air diffuses into the blood in the capillaries surrounding the alveoli in the lungs, and carbon dioxide from the blood diffuses into the air to be exhaled.