Stefan Borović Posted June 6, 2012 Share Posted June 6, 2012 (edited) Back in class we had the following problem: The air we breathe is about 21% oxygen, by volume. Exhaled air contains about 14% of oxygen. The absorption of oxygen within the lungs takes place in tiny spherical compartments called alveoli which have a diameter of the order of 0.1 mm. Estimate the number of oxygen molecules absorbed in one breath in each of the alveoli. (Assume that body temperature is 37°C.) [math]n= \frac{pV}{RT}= \frac{101325 Jm^{-3}\times 5.23\times 10^{-13}m^{3}}{8.3145JK^{-1}mol^{-1}\times 310.15K}[/math] [math]n=2.06\times 10^{-11} mol [/math] [math]N= 1.24\times 10^{-13} molecules[/math] I assumed that the pressure inside the alveoli is 1 atm, that [math]r= \frac{d}{2}[/math] and calculated the volume using [math]V= \frac{4}{3} r^{3} \pi[/math] Now, [math]21 \% - 14 \% = 7\%[/math] and [math]7 \% \times N= 8.7 \times 10^{11}[/math] End-of-chapter solution is [math]6.9 \times 10^{12}molecules[/math] What am I doing wrong? @admin: It seems to me now that this should better be in the general Chemistry thread? Edited June 6, 2012 by Stefan Borović Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Enthalpy Posted June 23, 2012 Share Posted June 23, 2012 I get the same figures as yours (except 10+13 molecules, not 10-13). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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