I was under the impression that the body is off-gassing more efficiently at safety stops than at the surface.
I remember a chart....somewhere.... somehow... that scientists were using to track micro-bubbles. A bunch of different profiles were used including direct ascents. The '10m/min ascent with safety stop' profile showed less micro-bubbling than a 10m/min ascent direct to the surface.
This would tell me that 5mins at a safety stop would be 'worth' more than 5 mins at the surface.
In principle, the largest 'tolerable' gradient is what will be most effective at having the gas transfer occur...think of it like Potential Energy. This is the same as what we observe when we compress (dive) for ongassing; its just that we can't decompress as "strongly" without the risk of DCS.
However...and this is where the tracking of microbubbles comes in...what research has found is that we will get tiny bubbles in our bloodstream which, for as far as we can determine, aren't "harmful", and the traditional tables/models which permit getting to the surface relatively quickly for the "Strongest Tolerable" gradient didn't know that they were permitting microbubbling.
However, what has also been found is that once a bubble has formed, the gas transfer becomes less effective, which means that the offgassing is slower and not optimized.
As such, we need to refine what we want: what we want is the optimal pressure gradient at which the transfer rate is the highest (without harm), and based on current knowledge, we want this pressure to be just before microbubble formation starts.
For a given dive profile, let's assume that this point is at 13.7 ft, which is why a 15ft safety stop is a good thing. However, after X minutes at that stop, the diver has been successful in reduding his N2 loading .. which means that the "optimal pressure" point has changed and needs to be recalculated. Because there's now less residual N2, the optimal point is going to be shallower ... and it is eventually going to be at the surface. (Actually, in theory, it will continue to drop even below 14.7psia of sea level).
The pragmatic question is going to be how long of a Safety Stop is going to 'speed up' offgassing and what's the magnitude of the benefit? I can't recall any models that really try to model/track microbubble formation to allow a longer repetitive dive because your prior dive's ascent was confirmed to be good - - sure, there's dive computers (like Suunto) that will punish a diver for a skipped safety stop, but what's not clear to me is how well grounded this is in quantitative science ... I suspect that such examples are just very crudely rule-based (ie, "he only made a 2:59 stop, so he failed to clear the 3:00 flag, so multiply all of his M-values by XX constant).
Saying that- with the described profiles of the OP, safety stops would do little effect as the long compartments are controlling the dive for which incredibly long safety stops are needed to do anything significant.
Agreed, although a 5 minute stop at 6ft (2m) still wouldn't be a bad idea.
-hh