Have you considered that a constant ascent rate yields an INCREASING volume expansion rate? A 33 fpm rate, any microbubbles present expand at 0.4% per second (100 fsw), 0.9% per second (30 fsw), and 1.3% per second (10 fsw). Ascending from the safety stop at 33 fpm is unnecessarily risky, in my view. Numerous anecdotal reports of less fatigue agree with this stance. Google subclinical DCS some time.
Ok, I would never step in front of anyone's decisions on an assumption of risk and how they choose to conduct their dives. I am a big believer in individuals making their own decisions.
Yes, of course the relative pressure change and hence volume gradient of expanding material [bubbles] increase as you rise in the water column and reaches maximum expansion values nearest the surface.....I was not referring to expansion or absorption of micro or macro bubbles but rather the on and off gassing of tissues, which may or may not promote or increase actual bubble or nuclei growth.
The issue with all this guessing about what constitutes an optimal ascent rate is that nobody actually has test data that nails down exactly what transpires in the tissues including blood with differing ascent rates at differing depths, only suppositions based assumptions. Sure gases expand when ambient pressure decreases but idea is to limit growth of bubbles or even bubble formation in concert with micro nuclei presence not just how rapidly they form. Tons of variables contribute to DCI and bubble formation is just one.
The rate of on gassing and off gassing is a balancing act. At any depth and at any rate of descent or ascent tissues are simultaneously on gassing and off gassing, it is not an either/or. The empirical unknown at any time during a dive is what tissue is the critical or controlling tissue that could produce DCI; algorithms in the end are only assumptions of 'best case' based on mathematical models trying to coincide with currently known theories of physiological and physical parameters affecting a diver under hyperbaric and hypobaric conditions while breathing an array of gases.
So, we divers hopefully will digest what is published and balance that against our common sense to arrive at how much risk we will assume. In '55 we were told the best ascent rate was 25ft/min or just follow your smallest bubbles; even when we were diving at Tahoe 6,000 ft ABSL and diving to 200ft. What saved us was diving with at most 67cf in steel 72s; rocketing down, pull J valve when breathing got hard and slowly ascending, with no idea of our ascent rate. Where is the definitive information concerning ascent rates vs not generating DCI? It does not exist and may never. Super imposed is the widely different individual physiological, psychological, fitness and health status of each one of us that change over time and are unpredictable causative factors. Anecdotal information may indeed point to "the answer" but verification of assumptions is the safe way to proceed. Or not. Individual choice.
Will all divers suffer some degree of physiological deficit over time? Sure, but for me it has been well worth it.