Michael Guerrero
Contributor
I was talking with someone recently about deco and using O2. We had different ideas of how these things interplay and how they affect off-gassing.
My understanding after reading a lot of different material is that ppO2 is about safety, and FO2 is about off-gassing. If I want to maximize the benefits of accelerated decompression using O2, that involves increasing the fraction of it in my breathing gas, thereby offsetting the fraction of the inspired inert gasses present. The ppO2 really has no part to play in this transaction, as gasses come into and out of solution independent of each other.
ppO2 comes into play from a safety perspective, in that the higher the ppO2 for a given depth the more likely it will cause a toxicity or pulmonary issue. A ppO2 of 1.6 during deco represents the highest fraction of oxygen that is "safe" to breath at a depth, but remaining at a high ppO2 is not beneficial in and of itself if the fraction of O2 remains constant, outside of perhaps reducing the likelihood of bubbling through increasing the pressure gradient between arterial and venous blood.
If I want to maximize my inert gas washout, I should maximize the fraction of O2 I am breathing at any given depth. Thus, washout at 10 ft on 100% O2 is just as efficient as washout at 20 ft, with perhaps the exception of a greater likelihood of bubbling at 10 ft vs. 20 ft. It is therefore the fraction of O2, not the partial pressure, that matters.
My understanding after reading a lot of different material is that ppO2 is about safety, and FO2 is about off-gassing. If I want to maximize the benefits of accelerated decompression using O2, that involves increasing the fraction of it in my breathing gas, thereby offsetting the fraction of the inspired inert gasses present. The ppO2 really has no part to play in this transaction, as gasses come into and out of solution independent of each other.
ppO2 comes into play from a safety perspective, in that the higher the ppO2 for a given depth the more likely it will cause a toxicity or pulmonary issue. A ppO2 of 1.6 during deco represents the highest fraction of oxygen that is "safe" to breath at a depth, but remaining at a high ppO2 is not beneficial in and of itself if the fraction of O2 remains constant, outside of perhaps reducing the likelihood of bubbling through increasing the pressure gradient between arterial and venous blood.
If I want to maximize my inert gas washout, I should maximize the fraction of O2 I am breathing at any given depth. Thus, washout at 10 ft on 100% O2 is just as efficient as washout at 20 ft, with perhaps the exception of a greater likelihood of bubbling at 10 ft vs. 20 ft. It is therefore the fraction of O2, not the partial pressure, that matters.