Stefan Borović Posted June 6, 2012 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
Enthalpy Posted June 23, 2012 Posted June 23, 2012 I get the same figures as yours (except 10+13 molecules, not 10-13).
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