Borek said:
We are talking about diving, so the oxygen usage will be much higher than the average.
Being a mostly sedate snorkeler, and haven't ever scuba dived, I don't know of such things.
But
wiki,
via the Rubicon Foundation, via the US Navy, gave me some more numbers to work with:
An average diver with a fully closed-circuit rebreather needs 1.5 liters of oxygen per minute while swimming or .64 liters per minute while resting.
O2 consumption while scuba diving
1.5 l/min swimming
3.9 times my rate [860 watts via electrolysis]
0.64 l/min resting
1.7 times my rate [370 watts]
I would call that "a bit higher", rather than "much" higher.
diogenesNY said:
Revisit the rebreather link...
Not sure why I didn't go there first. Interesting numbers:
As a person breathes, the body consumes oxygen and produces carbon dioxide. Base metabolism requires about 0.25 L/min of oxygen from a breathing rate of about 6 L/min, and a fit person working hard may ventilate at a rate of 95 L/min but will only metabolise about 4 L/min of oxygen
O2 consumption while scuba diving
0.25 l/min base metabolic
only 65% of my base rate! [140 watts]
4.0 l/min working hard
10 times my base rate [2300 watts]
Not sure why people work so hard when they're scuba diving. Are they chasing
Black Marlins [80 mph!]?
The only time my metabolic rate went up while snorkeling was when a Moray Eel came up from the depths to greet me. (Hanauma Bay, HI. circa 1980)
Seth Domings said:
all a re-breather does is let you use oxygen more than once, and increases the amount of time you can breathe underwater, but I want to utilize the oxygen in the water
Like "Artificial Gills"?
That's actually been discussed before:
Underwater Breathing Device Has $820,000 Of Funding Despite Being Scientifically Impossible
Firstly, this device isn’t particularly big. In fact, it’s only 29 centimeters (11.5 inches) long. In order to filter out enough oxygen from the water for the user to, you know, not die, a device of this size would have to be getting through 90 liters (24 gallons) of water every single minute, while operating at 100 percent efficiency.
That’s about six garden hoses’ worth of pressure. The only way to do this would be to have the swimmer move at speeds that would make Usain Bolt blush.
Subsequent research indicates that those goof knuckles
gave back the $900,000 they eventually collected from the crowd of goofier knuckles that gave them the money.
I doubt I will get any argument that "recycled" oxygen is no different than "fresh" oxygen, atomically, or diatomically speaking.
Utilizing the oxygen in the water, for your purpose, would require some
very big gills, IMHO.