Hi Matt,
I can see why you are confused.
I must admit I had not previously looked in detail at the concept of "the oxygen window". It would appear that I had wrongly assumed that this term means something other than what it does. I suspect others may have made the same mistake.
If I can return to first principles, the main aim of any decompression mix is to reduce the inert gas counterpressure, since this is the most important factor in offgassing rate. The obvious choice for any deco mix is (high fractions of) oxygen because oxygen is readily available, non-narcotic, easy to control and relatively safe.
As readers know it has two main disadvantages. Firstly it is toxic to the CNS at the high partial pressures seen at the start of any accelerated deco schedule (>=1.6 bar) and, secondly, it produces whole body toxicity after prolonged exposure (in which potentially irreversible pathological changes also reduce offgassing efficiency).
My naive impression of the "oxygen window" was therefore the window in a decompression schedule during which high oxygen partial pressures and CNS toxicity are avoided at the start of its use, and the time-dependent toxicity which inevitably develops with prolonged exposure at these high partial pressures.
If my assessment is correct, the oxygen window - as defined above - is a more intimate additional facilitation in offgassing produced by the biochemical and physiological effects of high partial pressures of oxygen itself (on the Hb dissociation curve and others) over and above that of any other inert diluent ( that has not been used in the bottom mix) but is used in the decompression mix to maximise the inert gas offgassing pressure.
Very basic biochemistry;
Glucose + oxygen => water and carbon dioxide
C6 H12 O6 + 6 (O2) = 6 (H2O) + 6 (CO2)
In normal cellular respiration of glucose, for each molecule of O2 used one molecule of CO2 is produced
However other substrates can be used, including glycogen and lipids. Using alcohol as an example;-
C2 H5 OH + 3(O2) = 3 H2O + 2 (CO2)
Ethanol plus three oxygen molecules gives water and only two carbon dioxide molecules;-
Is that a fair assessment Dr Deco, or am confusing the matter even further? :boozer:
