Hemoglobin carries oxygen from the lungs to the body and carbon dioxide back from the body to the lungs.
The haemoglobine found in the red blood corpuscles carries the carbon dioxide in the form of carboxyhaemoglobin .
Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, and Nitrogen
Carbon dioxide
In arterial blood cells Oxygen. In venous blood cells Carbon Dioxide.
Cells, water, carbon dioxide, waste
Hemoglobin.
Blood carbon dioxide levels help regulate the pH of the blood. Carbon dioxide is converted to bicarbonate ions in the blood, which helps maintain the blood's acid-base balance. Changes in blood carbon dioxide levels can result in respiratory and metabolic imbalances.
The common most water material found in blood is carbon dioxide gas. Carbon dioxide gas is then exhaled out of the body. Blood, however, also have some other waste materials dissolved in it which are taken to the kidney for purification.
Venous blood is loaded with carbon dioxide and low in oxygen Arterial blood is rich in oxygen with little carbon dioxide
The carbon dioxide and oxygen are the two main gases in plasma. When blood travels to the lungs the concentration of these two gases changes.
Oxygenated blood is red. The presence of carbon dioxide in the blood does not alter the color.
In the lungs, carbon dioxide is concentrated more in the blood. The alveoli keeps the carbon dioxide at a lower level than in the blood.