Thanks for that explaination. That is a great way of thinking about it.
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For my classes I use the following analogy to explain the ongassing/offgassing process ...
So there really is no hard answer to your question ... my best advice for a 5-dive a day liveaboard is to use nitrox (if it's an option), limit the time you spend deep, spend a longer than normal time in the shallows on each dive, drink lots of water or other hydrating fluids, limit your alcohol and caffeine intake, and get a good night's sleep between those 5-dive days.
The Doppler ND Dive Table has an NDL of 205min for 30fsw and 245min for 25fsw.Some could say that it's 33 fsw. Because that is where the pressure gradient is at a 2:1 ratio, and there is no - NDL for less than 33 feet. However...
It's called saturation diving.
The Navy teaches this to their divers.
It involves depth/time. At a given depth your tissues become saturated with N2 and will not load any more. You can work at those depths for days on end, but you must stay at that relative depth for the work period, (IE; if you surface, you must end the dive in a chamber at that depth until you return to that working depth.)
I'm not definite about this, but I think you need 10 hours of deco for every hour at a given working depth.
Is it worth it? For the work the Navy does, they feel it is.
The simple answer is "yes," there is an equilibrium point, but it's not depth, it's time.
Stay long enough at any depth (or altitude) and your tissues will on or off gas (depending upon which direction from which you came) to reach an equilibrium with the ambient pressure.