Chemical and
physical properties
Small pellets of dry ice
subliming in air.
Carbon dioxide is colorless. At low
concentrations, the gas is odorless. At
higher concentrations it has a sharp, acidic
odor. It will act as an asphyxiant and an
irritant. When inhaled at concentrations
much higher than usual atmospheric levels,
it can produce a sour taste in the mouth and
a stinging sensation in the nose and throat.
These effects result from the gas dissolving
in the
mucous membranes and
saliva, forming a weak solution of
carbonic acid. This sensation can also
occur during an attempt to stifle a burp
after drinking a
carbonated beverage. Amounts above 5,000
ppm are considered very unhealthy, and those
above about 50,000 ppm (equal to 5% by
volume) are considered dangerous to animal
life.[4]
At
standard temperature and pressure, the
density of carbon dioxide is around
1.98 kg/m³, about 1.5 times that of
air. The carbon dioxide molecule (O=C=O)
contains two
double bonds and has a linear shape. It
has no electrical
dipole, and as it is fully
oxidized, it is moderately
reactive and is non-flammable, but will
support the combustion of metals such as
magnesium.
At −78.51°
C or −109.3°
F, carbon dioxide changes directly from
a solid phase to a gaseous phase through
sublimation, or from gaseous to solid
through
deposition. Solid carbon dioxide is
normally called "dry
ice", a
generic trademark. It was first observed
in 1825 by the French chemist
Charles Thilorier. Dry ice is commonly
used as a cooling agent, and it is
relatively inexpensive. A convenient
property for this purpose is that solid
carbon dioxide sublimes directly into the
gas phase leaving no liquid. It can often be
found in grocery stores and laboratories,
and it is also used in the shipping
industry. The largest non-cooling use for
dry ice is
blast cleaning.
Liquid carbon dioxide forms only at
pressures above 5.1 atm; the
triple point of carbon dioxide is about
518
kPa at −56.6 °C (See phase diagram,
above). The
critical point is 7.38 MPa at 31.1 °C.[5]
An alternative form of solid carbon
dioxide, an
amorphous glass-like form, is possible,
although not at atmospheric pressure.[6]
This form of glass, called
carbonia, was produced by
supercooling heated CO2 at
extreme pressure (40–48
GPa or about 400,000 atmospheres) in a
diamond anvil. This discovery confirmed
the theory that carbon dioxide could exist
in a glass state similar to other members of
its elemental family, like
silicon (silica
glass) and
germanium. Unlike silica and germania
glasses, however, carbonia glass is not
stable at normal pressures and reverts back
to gas when pressure is released.
History of
human understanding
Crystal structure of dry ice
Carbon dioxide was one of the first gases
to be described as a substance distinct from
air. In the seventeenth century, the
Flemish chemist
Jan Baptist van Helmont observed that
when he burned
charcoal in a closed vessel, the mass of
the resulting ash was much less than that of
the original charcoal. His interpretation
was that the rest of the charcoal had been
transmuted into an invisible substance he
termed a "gas" or "wild spirit" (spiritus
sylvestre).
The properties of carbon dioxide were
studied more thoroughly in the 1750s by the
Scottish physician
Joseph Black. He found that
limestone (calcium
carbonate) could be heated or treated
with
acids to yield a gas he called "fixed
air." He observed that the fixed air was
denser than air and did not support either
flame or animal life. Black also found that
when bubbled through an aqueous solution of
lime (calcium
hydroxide), it would
precipitate calcium carbonate. He used
this phenomenon to illustrate that carbon
dioxide is produced by animal respiration
and microbial fermentation. In 1772, English
chemist
Joseph Priestley published a paper
entitled Impregnating Water with Fixed
Air in which he described a process of
dripping
sulfuric acid (or oil of vitriol
as Priestley knew it) on chalk in order to
produce carbon dioxide, and forcing the gas
to dissolve by agitating a bowl of water in
contact with the gas.[7]
Carbon dioxide was first liquefied (at
elevated pressures) in 1823 by
Humphry Davy and
Michael Faraday.[8]
The earliest description of solid carbon
dioxide was given by
Charles Thilorier, who in 1834 opened a
pressurized container of liquid carbon
dioxide, only to find that the cooling
produced by the rapid evaporation of the
liquid yielded a "snow" of solid CO2.[9]
Isolation and
production
Carbon dioxide may be obtained from air
distillation. However, this yields only
very small quantities of CO2. A
large variety of chemical reactions yield
carbon dioxide, such as the reaction between
most acids and most metal carbonates. For
example, the reaction between
hydrochloric acid and calcium carbonate
(limestone or chalk) is depicted below:
- 2 HCl + CaCO3
→ CaCl2 + H2CO3
The H2CO3
then decomposes to water and CO2.
Such reactions are accompanied by foaming or
bubbling, or both. In industry such
reactions are widespread because they can be
used to neutralize waste acid streams.
The production of
quicklime (CaO) a chemical that has
widespread use, from limestone by heating at
about 850 °C also produces CO2:
- CaCO3
→ CaO + CO2
The
combustion of all carbon containing
fuels, such as
methane (natural
gas), petroleum distillates (gasoline,
diesel,
kerosene,
propane), but also of coal and wood,
will yield carbon dioxide and, in most
cases, water. As an example the chemical
reaction between methane and oxygen is given
below.
- CH4 +
2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O
Iron is reduced from its oxides with
coke in a
blast furnace, producing
pig iron and carbon dioxide:
- 2 Fe2O3
+ 3 C → 4 Fe + 3 CO2
Yeast metabolizes
sugar to produce carbon dioxide and
ethanol, also known as alcohol, in the
production of wines, beers and other
spirits, but also in the production of
bioethanol:
- C6H12O6
→ 2 CO2 +
2 C2H5OH
All
aerobic organisms produce
CO2
when they oxidize
carbohydrates,
fatty acids, and proteins in the
mitochondria of cells. The large number of
reactions involved are exceedingly complex
and not described easily. Refer to (cellular
respiration,
anaerobic respiration and
photosynthesis).
Photoautotrophs (i.e. plants,
cyanobacteria) use another modus
operandi: Plants absorb
CO2
from the air, and, together with water,
react it to form carbohydrates:
- n CO2
+ n H2O → (CH2O)Template:Chem/dispAAATemplate:Chem/dispAA02
Carbon dioxide is
soluble in water, in which it
spontaneously interconverts between CO2
and H2CO3
(carbonic
acid). The relative concentrations of
CO2, H2CO3,
and the deprotonated forms
HCO3−
(bicarbonate)
and CO32−(carbonate)
depend on the
pH. In neutral or slightly alkaline
water (pH > 6.5), the bicarbonate form
predominates (>50%) becoming the most
prevalent (>95%) at the pH of seawater,
while in very alkaline water (pH > 10.4) the
predominant (>50%) form is carbonate. The
bicarbonate and carbonate forms are very
soluble, such that air-equilibrated ocean
water (mildly alkaline with typical pH = 8.2
– 8.5) contains about 120 mg of bicarbonate
per liter.
Industrial
production
Carbon dioxide is produced mainly from
six processes:[10]
- From combustion of
fossil fuels and
wood;
- As a by-product of hydrogen
production plants, where methane is
converted to CO2;
- As a by-product of
fermentation of
sugar in the
brewing of
beer,
whisky and other
alcoholic
beverages;
- From thermal decomposition of
limestone, CaCO3,
in the manufacture of
lime, CaO;
- As a by-product of
sodium phosphate manufacture;
- Directly from natural carbon dioxide
springs, where it is produced by the
action of acidified water on
limestone or
dolomite.
Uses
Carbon dioxide bubbles in a soft
drink.
Carbon dioxide is used by the food
industry, the oil industry, and the chemical
industry.[10]
It is used in many consumer products that
require pressurized gas because it is
inexpensive and nonflammable, and because it
undergoes a phase transition from gas to
liquid at room temperature at an attainable
pressure of approximately 60
bar (870 psi, 59 atm), allowing far more
carbon dioxide to fit in a given container
than otherwise would. Life jackets often
contain canisters of pressured carbon
dioxide for quick inflation. Aluminum
capsules are also sold as supplies of
compressed gas for
airguns,
paintball markers, for inflating bicycle
tires, and for making
seltzer. Rapid vaporization of liquid
carbon dioxide is used for blasting in coal
mines. High concentrations of carbon dioxide
can also be used to kill pests, such as the
Common Clothes Moth.
Drinks
Carbon dioxide is used to produce
carbonated
soft drinks and
soda water. Traditionally, the
carbonation in beer and sparkling wine comes
about through natural fermentation, but some
manufacturers carbonate these drinks
artificially.
Foods
A candy called
Pop Rocks is pressurized with carbon
dioxide gas at about 40 bar (600 psi). When
placed in the mouth, it dissolves (just like
other hard candy) and releases the gas
bubbles with an audible pop.
Leavening agents produce carbon dioxide
to cause dough to rise. Baker's yeast
produces carbon dioxide by fermentation of
sugars within the dough, while chemical
leaveners such as baking powder and baking
soda release carbon dioxide when heated or
if exposed to acids.
Pneumatic
systems
Carbon dioxide is one of the most
commonly used compressed gases for pneumatic
(pressurized gas) systems in portable
pressure tools and
combat robots.
Fire
extinguisher
Carbon dioxide extinguishes flames, and
some
fire extinguishers, especially those
designed for electrical fires, contain
liquid carbon dioxide under pressure. Carbon
dioxide has also been widely used as an
extinguishing agent in fixed fire protection
systems for total flooding of a protected
space, (National Fire Protection Association
Code 12). International Maritime
Organisation standards also recognise carbon
dioxide systems for fire protection of ship
holds and engine rooms. Carbon dioxide based
fire protection systems have been linked to
several deaths. A review of CO2
systems (Carbon Dioxide as a Fire
Suppressant: Examining the Risks, US EPA)
identified 51 incidents between 1975 and the
date of the report, causing 72 deaths and
145 injuries.
Welding
Carbon dioxide also finds use as an
atmosphere for welding, although in the
welding arc, it reacts to
oxidize most metals. Use in the
automotive industry is common despite
significant evidence that welds made in
carbon dioxide are more
brittle than those made in more inert
atmospheres, and that such weld joints
deteriorate over time because of the
formation of carbonic acid. It is used as a
welding gas primarily because it is much
less expensive than more inert gases such as
argon or
helium.
Caffeine
removal
Liquid carbon dioxide is a good
solvent for many
lipophilic
organic compounds, and is used to remove
caffeine from
coffee. First, the green coffee beans
are soaked in water. The beans are placed in
the top of a column seventy feet (21 m)
high. Then supercritical carbon dioxide in
fluid form at about 93 degrees Celsius
enters at the bottom of the column. The
caffeine diffuses out of the beans and into
the carbon dioxide
Pharmaceutical
and other chemical processing
Carbon dioxide has begun to attract
attention in the
pharmaceutical and other chemical
processing industries as a less toxic
alternative to more traditional solvents
such as
organochlorides. It's used by some
dry cleaners for this reason. (See
green chemistry.)
In the chemical industry, carbon dioxide
is used for the production of
urea,
carbonates and
bicarbonates, and
sodium salicylate.
Agriculture /
Biological applications
Plants require carbon dioxide to conduct
photosynthesis. Because of low current
atmospheric concentration, carbon dioxide is
practically the limiting factor of the Earth
life, as compare to two other similarly
important components - water and sun light.
While plants "in wild" are optimized for
this, plant-intense greenhouses may (and of
large size - must) enrich their atmospheres
with
additional CO2 to sustain
plant life and growth, because the low
present-day atmosphere concentration of CO2
is just above the "suffocation" level for
green plants. A
photosynthesis-related drop (by a factor
less than two) in carbon dioxide
concentration in a greenhouse compartment
would kill green plants, or, at least,
completely stop their growth. At very high
concentrations (a factor of 100 or more
higher than its atmospheric concentration),
carbon dioxide can be toxic to animal life,
so raising the concentration to 10,000 ppm
(1%) or higher for several hours will
eliminate pests such as
whiteflies and
spider mites in a greenhouse.
It has been proposed that carbon dioxide
from power generation be bubbled into ponds
to grow algae that could then be converted
into
biodiesel fuel.[11]
Carbon dioxide is already increasingly used
in greenhouses as the main carbon source for
Spirulina algae. In medicine, up to 5%
carbon dioxide (factor 150 as compare to
atmospheric concentration) is added to pure
oxygen for stimulation of breathing
after
apnea and to stabilize the
O2/CO2
balance in blood.
Lasers
A common type of industrial gas
laser is the
carbon dioxide laser.
Polymers and
plastics
Carbon dioxide can also be combined with
limonene oxide from orange peels or
other
epoxides to create polymers and
plastics.[12]
Oil recovery
Carbon dioxide is used in
enhanced oil recovery where it is
injected into or adjacent to producing oil
wells, usually under
supercritical conditions. It acts as
both a pressurizing agent and, when
dissolved into the underground
crude oil, significantly reduces its
viscosity, enabling the oil to flow more
rapidly through the earth to the removal
well.[13]
In mature oil fields, extensive pipe
networks are used to carry the carbon
dioxide to the injection points.
As
refrigerants
Liquid and solid carbon dioxide are
important
refrigerants, especially in the food
industry, where they are employed during the
transportation and storage of ice cream and
other frozen foods. Solid carbon dioxide is
called "dry ice" and is used for small
shipments where refrigeration equipment is
not practical.
Liquid carbon
dioxide (industry nomenclature R744 or
R-744) was used as a refrigerant prior to
the discovery of
R-12 and is likely to enjoy a
renaissance due to environmental concerns.
Its physical properties are highly favorable
for cooling, refrigeration, and heating
purposes, having a high volumetric cooling
capacity. Due to its operation at pressures
of up to 130 bars, CO2 systems
require highly resistant components that
have been already developed to serial
production in many sectors. In car air
conditioning, in more than 90% of all
driving conditions, R744 operates more
efficiently than systems using
R-134a. Its environmental advantages (GWP
of 1, non-ozone depleting, non-toxic,
non-flammable) could make it the future
working fluid to replace current HFCs in
cars, supermarkets, hot water heat pumps,
among others. Some applications: Coca-Cola
has fielded CO2-based beverage
coolers and the
U.S. Army is interested in CO2
refrigeration and heating technology.[14][15]
By the end of 2007, the global car
industry is expected to decide on the
next-generation refrigerant in car air
conditioning. CO2 is one
discussed option.(see
The Cool War)
Coal bed
methane recovery
In
enhanced coal bed methane recovery,
carbon dioxide is pumped into the coal seam
to displace methane.[16]
Wine making
Carbon dioxide in the form of dry ice is
often used in the wine making process to
cool down bunches of grapes quickly after
picking to help prevent spontaneous
fermentation by wild yeasts. The main
advantage of using dry ice over regular
water ice is that it cools the grapes
without adding any additional water that may
decrease the sugar concentration in the
grape must, and therefore also decrease the
alcohol concentration in the finished wine.
Dry ice is also used during the cold soak
phase of the wine making process to keep
grapes cool. The carbon dioxide gas that
results from the sublimation of the dry ice
tends to settle to the bottom of tanks
because it is heavier than regular air. The
settled carbon dioxide gas creates an
hypoxic environment which helps to prevent
bacteria from growing on the grapes until it
is time to start the fermentation with the
desired strain of yeast.
Carbon dioxide is also used to create a
hypoxic environment for carbonic maceration,
the process used to produce Beaujolais wine.
Carbon dioxide is sometimes used to top
up wine bottles or other
storage vessels such as barrels to
prevent oxidation, though it has the problem
that it can dissolve into the wine, making a
previously still wine slightly fizzy. For
this reason, other gasses such as
nitrogen or
argon are preferred for this process by
professional wine makers.
pH control
Carbon dioxide can be used as a mean of
controlling the
pH of swimming pools, by continuously
adding gas to the water, thus keeping the pH
level from rising. Among the advantages of
this is the avoidance of handling (more
hazardous) acids.
In the Earth's
atmosphere
Carbon dioxide in
earth's atmosphere is considered a
trace gas currently occurring at an
average concentration of about 385 parts per
million by volume or 582 parts per million
by mass. The total mass of atmospheric
carbon dioxide is 3.0×1015 kg
(3,000 gigatonnes). Its concentration varies
seasonally (see graph at right) and also
considerably on a regional basis, especially
near the ground. In urban areas
concentrations are generally higher and
indoors they can reach 10 times background
levels. Carbon dioxide is a
greenhouse gas.
Yearly increase of atmospheric
CO
2: In the 1960s,
the average annual increase was
37% of the 2000-2007 average.
[17]
Five hundred million years ago carbon
dioxide was 20 times more prevalent than
today, decreasing to 4-5 times during the
Jurassic period and then slowly
declining with
a particularly swift reduction occurring
49 million years ago.[18][19]
Human activities such as the combustion of
fossil fuels and
deforestation have caused the
atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide
to increase by about 35% since the beginning
of the
age of industrialization.[20]
Up to 40% of the gas emitted by some
volcanoes during subaerial
volcanic eruptions is carbon dioxide.[21]
It is estimated that volcanoes release about
130-230 million tonnes (145-255 million
tons) of CO2 into the atmosphere
each year. Carbon dioxide is also produced
by hot springs such as those at the
Bossoleto site near
Rapolano Terme in
Tuscany,
Italy. Here, in a bowl-shaped depression
of about 100 m diameter, local
concentrations of CO2 rise to
above 75% overnight, sufficient to kill
insects and small animals, but warm rapidly
when sunlit and disperse by convection
during the day.[22]
Locally high concentrations of CO2,
produced by disturbance of deep lake water
saturated with CO2 are thought to
have caused 37 fatalities at
Lake Monoun,
Cameroon in 1984 and 1700 casualties at
Lake Nyos, Cameroon in 1986.[23]
Emissions of CO2 by human
activities are currently more than 130 times
greater than the quantity emitted by
volcanoes, amounting to about 27 billion
tonnes per year.[24]
In the oceans
There is about 50 times as much carbon
dissolved in the oceans in the form of CO2
and carbonic acid,
bicarbonate and
carbonate ions as exists in the
atmosphere. The oceans act as an enormous
carbon sink, and have taken up about a
third of CO2 emitted by human
activity.[25]
Gas solubility decreases as the temperature
of water increases and therefore the rate of
uptake from the atmosphere decreases as
ocean temperatures rise.
Most of the CO2 taken up by
the ocean forms carbonic acid in equilibrium
with bicarbonate and carbonate ions. Some is
consumed in photosynthesis by organisms in
the water, and a small proportion of that
sinks and leaves the carbon cycle. Increased
CO2 in the atmosphere has led to
decreasing
alkalinity of seawater and there is some
concern that this may adversely affect
organisms living in the water. In
particular, with decreasing alkalinity, the
availability of carbonates for forming
shells decreases.[26]
Biological
role
Carbon dioxide is an end product in
organisms that obtain energy from breaking
down sugars, fats and
amino acids with
oxygen as part of their
metabolism, in a process known as
cellular respiration. This includes all
plants, animals, many fungi and some
bacteria. In higher animals, the carbon
dioxide travels in the blood from the body's
tissues to the lungs where it is exhaled. In
plants using photosynthesis, carbon dioxide
is absorbed from the atmosphere.
Role in
photosynthesis
Overview of photosynthesis and
respiration. Carbon dioxide (at
right), together with water,
form oxygen and organic
compounds (at left) by
photosynthesis, which
can be
respired
to water and (CO
2).
Plants remove carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere by
photosynthesis, also called
carbon assimilation, which uses light
energy to produce
organic compounds (cellulose,
lipids, and various
proteins) by combining carbon dioxide
and water. Free oxygen is released as gas
from the decomposition of water molecules,
while the hydrogen is split into its protons
and electrons and used to generate chemical
energy via
photophosphorylation. This energy is
required for the fixation of carbon dioxide
in the
Calvin cycle to make
3-phosphoglycerate that is used in
metabolism, to construct sugars that can be
used as an energy source within the plant
through respiration and as the raw material
for the construction of more complex organic
molecules, such as
polysaccharides,
nucleic acids and proteins during
growth.
Even when greenhouses are vented, carbon
dioxide must be introduced into them to
maintain plant growth, as the concentration
of carbon dioxide can fall during daylight
hours to as low as 200 ppm (a limit of
C3 carbon fixation photosynthesis[citation
needed]). Plants can grow up
to 50 percent faster in concentrations of
1,000 ppm CO2 when compared with
ambient conditions, though this assumes no
change in climate and no limitation on other
nutrients.[27]
Some people (for example
David Bellamy) believe that as the
concentration of CO2 rises in the
atmosphere that it will lead to faster plant
growth and therefore increase food
production.[28]
Such views are too simplistic; studies have
shown that increased CO2 leads to
fewer stomata developing on plants[29]
which leads to reduced water usage.[30]
Studies using
FACE have shown that increases in CO2
lead to decreased concentration of
micronutrients in crop plants.[31]
This may have knock-on effects on other
parts of
ecosystems as herbivores will need to
eat more food to gain the same amount of
protein.[32]
Plants also emit CO2 during
respiration, and so the majority of plants
and algae, which use
C3 photosynthesis, are only net
absorbers during the day. Though a growing
forest will absorb many tons of CO2
each year, the World Bank writes that a
mature forest will produce as much CO2
from respiration and decomposition of dead
specimens (e.g. fallen branches) as is used
in
biosynthesis in growing plants.[33]
However six experts in biochemistry,
biogeology, forestry and related areas
writing in the science journal Nature that
"Our results demonstrate that old-growth
forests can continue to accumulate carbon,
contrary to the long-standing view that they
are carbon neutral."
[34]
Mature forests are valuable
carbon sinks, helping maintain balance
in the Earth's atmosphere. Additionally, and
crucially to life on earth, photosynthesis
by phytoplankton consumes dissolved CO2
in the upper ocean and thereby promotes the
absorption of CO2 from the
atmosphere.[35]
Toxicity
Carbon dioxide content in fresh air
(averaged between sea-level and 10 hPa
level, i.e. about 30 km altitude) varies
between 0.036% (360 ppm) and 0.039% (390 ppm),
depending on the location (see
graphical map of CO2).
Prolonged exposure to moderate
concentrations can cause acidosis and
adverse effects on calcium phosphorus
metabolism resulting in increased calcium
deposits in soft tissue. Carbon dioxide is
toxic to the heart and causes diminished
contractile force.[36]
Toxicity and its effects increase with
the concentration of CO2, here
given in
volume percent of CO2 in the
air:
- 1%, as can occur in a crowded
auditorium with poor ventilation, can
cause drowsiness with prolonged
exposure.[2]
- At 2% it is mildly narcotic
and causes increased blood pressure and
pulse rate, and causes reduced hearing.[36]
- At about 5% it causes
stimulation of the respiratory centre,
dizziness, confusion and difficulty in
breathing accompanied by headache and
shortness of breath.[36]
- At about 8% it causes
headache, sweating, dim vision, tremor
and loss of consciousness after exposure
for between five and ten minutes.[36]
A natural disaster linked to CO2
intoxication occurred during the
limnic eruptions in the CO2-rich
lakes of
Monoun and
Nyos in the Okun range of North-West
Cameroon: the gas was brutally expelled
from the mountain lakes and leaked into the
surrounding valleys, killing most animal
forms. During the Lake Nyos tragedy of 1988,
1700 villagers and 3500 livestock died.
Due to the health risks associated with
carbon dioxide exposure, the U.S.
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration says that average exposure
for healthy adults during an eight-hour work
day should not exceed 5,000 ppm (0.5%). The
maximum safe level for infants, children,
the elderly and individuals with
cardio-pulmonary health issues is
significantly less. For short-term (under
ten minutes) exposure, the U.S. National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) and American Conference of
Government Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH)
limit is 30,000 ppm (3%). NIOSH also states
that carbon dioxide concentrations exceeding
4% are immediately dangerous to life and
health.[37]
Adaptation to increased levels of CO2
occurs in humans. Continuous inhalation of
CO2 can be tolerated at three
percent inspired concentrations for at least
one month and four percent inspired
concentrations for over a week. It was
suggested that 2.0 percent inspired
concentrations could be used for closed air
spaces (e.g. a
submarine) since the adaptation is
physiological and reversible. Decrement in
performance or in normal physical activity
does not happen at this level.[38][39]
These figures are valid for pure carbon
dioxide. In indoor spaces occupied by people
the carbon dioxide concentration will reach
higher levels than in pure outdoor air.
Concentrations higher than 1,000 ppm will
cause discomfort in more than 20% of
occupants, and the discomfort will increase
with increasing CO2
concentration. The discomfort will be caused
by various gases coming from human
respiration and perspiration, and not by CO2
itself. At 2,000 ppm the majority of
occupants will feel a significant degree of
discomfort, and many will develop nausea and
headaches. The CO2 concentration
between 300 and 2,500 ppm is used as an
indicator of indoor air quality.
Acute carbon dioxide toxicity is
sometimes known by the names given to it by
miners:
blackdamp (also called choke damp
or stythe).
Miners would try to alert themselves to
dangerous levels of carbon dioxide in a mine
shaft by bringing a caged canary with them
as they worked. The canary would inevitably
die before CO2 reached levels
toxic to people.
Carbon dioxide ppm levels (CDPL) are a
surrogate for measuring indoor pollutants
that may cause occupants to grow drowsy, get
headaches, or function at lower activity
levels. To eliminate most
indoor air quality complaints, total
indoor CDPL must be reduced to below 600.
NIOSH considers that indoor air
concentrations that exceed 1,000 are a
marker suggesting inadequate ventilation.
ASHRAE recommends they not exceed 1,000
inside a space.
Human
physiology
CO2 is carried in blood in
three different ways. (The exact percentages
vary depending whether it is arterial or
venous blood).
Hemoglobin, the main oxygen-carrying
molecule in
red blood cells, carries both oxygen and
carbon dioxide. However, the CO2
bound to hemoglobin does not bind to the
same site as oxygen. Instead, it combines
with the N-terminal groups on the four
globin chains. However, because of
allosteric effects on the hemoglobin
molecule, the binding of CO2
decreases the amount of oxygen that is bound
for a given partial pressure of oxygen. The
decreased binding to carbon dioxide in the
blood due to increased oxygen levels is
known as the
Haldane Effect, and is important in the
transport of carbon dioxide from the tissues
to the lungs. Conversely, a rise in the
partial pressure of CO2 or a
lower pH will cause offloading of oxygen
from hemoglobin, which is known as the
Bohr Effect.
Carbon dioxide is one of the mediators of
local
autoregulation of blood supply. If its
levels are high, the
capillaries expand to allow a greater
blood flow to that tissue.
Bicarbonate ions are crucial for
regulating blood pH. A person's breathing
rate influences the level of CO2
in their blood. Breathing that is too slow
or shallow causes
respiratory acidosis, while breathing
that is too rapid leads to
hyperventilation, which can cause
respiratory alkalosis.
Although the body requires oxygen for
metabolism, low oxygen levels do not
stimulate breathing. Rather, breathing is
stimulated by higher carbon dioxide levels.
As a result, breathing low-pressure air or a
gas mixture with no oxygen at all (such as
pure nitrogen) can lead to loss of
consciousness without ever experiencing
air hunger. This is especially perilous
for high-altitude fighter pilots. It is also
why flight attendants instruct passengers,
in case of loss of cabin pressure, to apply
the oxygen mask to themselves first before
helping others — otherwise one risks going
unconscious.[40]
Typically the gas we
exhale is about 4% to 5% carbon dioxide
and 4% to 5% less oxygen than was inhaled.
Breathing produces approximately 2.3
pounds (1 kg) of carbon dioxide per day per
person.[41]
See also
References
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External links