Asked by Haru Nanase
I have an assignment about deep sea diving and of course it involves some gas mixtures to be used. I just don't know what suitable gas mixtures do I have to use in order for this diving to be safe and successful. The scenario is this:
1. A shipwreck is located at a depth of 220m.
2. Up to 5 dives will be needed (per diver) to bring valuable to the surface.
Note: You could you different gas mixtures for this. How much of the different gas mixtures do I need?
HELP PLEASE!
1. A shipwreck is located at a depth of 220m.
2. Up to 5 dives will be needed (per diver) to bring valuable to the surface.
Note: You could you different gas mixtures for this. How much of the different gas mixtures do I need?
HELP PLEASE!
Answers
Answered by
Elena
• The majority of gas used in most SCUBA tanks is compressed air. This air is composed of the same elements everywhere - 21% Oxygen 79% Nitrogen. Advanced SCUBA divers may use an "enhanced" mixture of 32% (up to about 40%) Oxygen with the balance being Nitrogen. The number of divers who use a mixture like this is about 2 to 5% of all certified divers. Less than 1% of all divers may use a special Tri-mix of some rather exotic gases to allow very deep dives - however, it takes years of instruction and training to use these exotic mixes.
http://www.worlddivingreview.com/scuba-diving-safety-know-your-breathing-gases
http://njscuba.net/gear/trng_12_calculators.html
http://www.worlddivingreview.com/scuba-diving-safety-know-your-breathing-gases
http://njscuba.net/gear/trng_12_calculators.html
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.