Hi Alban,
Can I jump in here at risk of teaching my grandmother to suck eggs?
I can well understand why you are confused. Most divers take a while to understand DCI and the concept of tissue compartments. Let me try and explain how I see it?
A bottle of carbonated drink contains gas "forced" into solution by the high pressure in the bottle. Because it has been sealed for a long time it is at equilibrium - it is saturated and no more gas can dissolve.
If you (shake the bottle and then) quickly take off the stopper (crack the can?) it will fizz all over the place. This is because at the new, lower, pressure it contains more gas in solution than it can hold at that pressure ( it is super-saturated) so the gas comes out of solution throughout the whole body of the liquid.
If on the other hand you take the top of slowly, there will be a more gradual reduction in pressure within the bottle and the gas can diffuse out of solution from the surface of the liquid alone (provided the rate of pressure drop does not exceed the diffusion rate of the gas in solution). Consequently, no bubbles form in the body of the liquid.
Hence slow ascents and deco stops - It is all to do with the rate of change in pressure.
Recreational divers do not become fully saturated, like the bottle of beverage, and only the faster tissue compartments will become close to saturation during any dive. I think this is what has confused you. The fastest tissues such as the blood - with a half time of seconds - will be saturated but the slower compartments will not.
Only saturated tissues are at risk of causing DCI, so if the ascent is slow enough to allow surface diffsusion for all saturated tissues there is no risk of DCI and if no tissue "compartment" is saturated at any particular depth there is no risk of DCI.
I think you will now appreciate that the very slowest tissues are likely to be effectively ongassing at all stages of an NDL dive, but does this really matter as they will never approach saturation in any case?
Did you note my comment about shaking the bottle? Consider this is what you would be doing with post-dive exercise. You are generating micronucleii on which new bubbles form. (I think that's right, Dr Deco?)
As, I said above becuse the body is a dynamic system the risk of DCI is determined not by just the rate of ascent but by the rate of change in pressure and for a given rate of ascent this is greatest as you approach the surface.
Alban, I do hope this helps and does not cause even more confusion!
