CO2 Levels in Small Bedrooms: How Long is Safe?

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In summary: Normal breathing is around 6l/min and the air you breath out is about 5% CO2.So a room W=2.5metre x L=3.5m x H=2.4m = 21m^3 = 21,000l
  • #1
Dav333
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Just curious how long an adult person can stay in an average small (W=2.5metre x L=3.5m x H=2.4m) bedroom with the door & window shut before CO2 levels become dangerous?

And what about a small room like ~ w1.4m x L1.4m x h1.6m? I assume the small size would make a dramatic difference?

Because CO2 is heavier would most of it sink to the floor?
any input is appreciated thanks.
 
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  • #2
Normal breathing is around 6l/min and the air you breath out is about 5% CO2
So a room W=2.5metre x L=3.5m x H=2.4m = 21m^3 = 21,000l

So you would have breathed all the air in the room in 21000/6 min = 3500min = 60hours
At that point the air would be 5% CO2 which is toxic but not immediately fatal - you wouldn't be very well though!
 
  • #3
cool, thanks for the reply.

Very interesting
 
  • #4
That assumes the room us completely sealed, which it isn't. The reality is the concentration will never become problematic.
 
  • #5
Carbon dioxide is not toxic, it is carbon monoxide which is.

The problem with carbon dioxide is if it replaces the oxygen in the air, when its concentration increases.
 
  • #6
Studiot said:
Carbon dioxide is not toxic, it is carbon monoxide which is.

It's less toxic than carbon monoxide, but still toxic.
 
  • #7
Studiot said:
Carbon dioxide is not toxic, it is carbon monoxide which is.

The problem with carbon dioxide is if it replaces the oxygen in the air, when its concentration increases.
I assumed the same thing, but apparently not true. If CO2 reaches 1.5%, or ~40X normal, it becomes toxic, even if the O2 level remains sufficient to support respiration.
http://www.co2science.org//articles/V5/N48/EDIT.php
 
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  • #8
It's less toxic than carbon monoxide, but still toxic.

I'd be interested in your references and reasoning, if available?


Mheslep
I didn't see any figures to support the statement that if you increase CO2 to 1.5% or beyond in the presence of unchanged O2 percentage it was toxic, perhaps I was too quick reading it?
 
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  • #9
Studiot said:
I'd be interested in your references and reasoning, if available?


Mheslep
I didn't see any figures to support the statement that if you increase CO2 to 1.5% or beyond in the presence of unchanged O2 percentage, perhaps I was too quick reading it?

However, several studies have indicated that these phenomena have little to no negative impact on human health until the CO2 concentration of the air reaches approximately 15,000 ppm (Luft et al., 1974; Schaefer, 1982), which is 40 times greater than the air's current CO2 concentration
Also states the harm occurs via acidosis in the blood.
 
  • #10
But it doesn't state that the oxygen concentration is unchanged.

There are lots of references to show what happens if CO2 replaces oxygen, which is normally what happens, but I haven't seen any that state what happens if it replaces say nitrogen. Wikipedia is particularly gory.

My copy of Chemistry for the Medical Sciences devotes nearly a chapter to the biochemistry of CO2, but doesn't help here either, so I would appreciate reference to any study that covers increased CO2 without oxygen replacement.
 
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  • #11
Studiot said:
But it doesn't state that the oxygen concentration is unchanged.
That's because it is irrelevant whether the oxygen content has changed or not.

Humans go without oxygen bottles at the Everest base camp, where there is half as much oxygen as at sea level...so equivalent to 10.5% oxygen concentration at sea level. But if you were to replace half the oxygen with CO2 at sea level, leaving 10.5% of each, you'd die because it isn't the displacement of oxygen, it is the toxicity of CO2 that kills you.
There are lots of references to show what happens if CO2 replaces oxygen, which is normally what happens, but I haven't seen any that state what happens if it replaces say nitrogen.
It is due to misunderstandings, but the first link for a google for "carbon dioxide poison" gives this link, which has a detailed description of the misconception itself:
According to the newspapers CO2 is nontoxic and it is the decreased oxygen levels that kills. Using the equation above one can quickly conclude that adding 31 liters of CO2 would result in 24% CO2(almost instantly fatal) and 16% oxygen (equivalent with breathing at 2800 meters above sea level, which is not dangerous).

In conclusion, it is the toxic properties of CO2 that is fatal, not the drop in oxygen.
http://www.inspectapedia.com/hazmat/CO2gashaz.htm

Here's an interesting one:
Oxygen given to patients with Emphysema may reduce their ability to breathe, resulting in Hypercapnia. This is why exact doses of oxygen are usually figured out for those with Emphysema so that they receive neither too little nor too much oxygen.
http://www.ecureme.com/emyhealth/data/Hypercapnia.asp

Basically, it is saying that if you have a reduced lung capacity, it gets tough to strike a balance between getting enough oxygen and getting rid of enough CO2. If your lung capacity increases, your ability to get rid of CO2 decreases at the same time as the ability to take in oxygen decreases. But if you give pure oxygen, breathing slows and you can no longer get rid of CO2 fast enough, despite not breathing any in.

This is a forum post, but it gives a good description of what is going on in the blood itself:
Carbon dioxide is toxic in relatively high concentrations. This is because haemoglobin works by complexing with oxygen or carbon dioxide to carry them round the body (oxygen in/carbon dioxide out). This is a very finely balanced equilibrium and if the external carbon dioxide concentration rises too high then it prevents the red blood cells from picking up oxygen in the lungs. This is the reason that the Apollo 13 astronauts had to get their carbon dioxide scrubbers working again (despite not being low on oxygen).
Carbon Monoxide on the other hand forms so stable a complex with haemoglobin that neither oxygen nor carbon dioxide can displace it at atmospheric pressures.
http://everything2.com/title/carbon+dioxide

So CO2 is toxic because the hemoglobin needs to be able to hang on to both CO2 and O2 at the same time, but a small increase in CO2 concentration in the air makes the hemoglobin not get rid of CO2 fast enough. So while it can be said that the CO2 is displacing the O2 in your blood it isn't necessarily because it is displacing the O2 in the air because a small increase in ambient CO2 has a large effect on your blood's ability to get rid of it.
 
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  • #12
russ_watters said:
...

Basically, it is saying that if you have a reduced lung capacity, it gets tough to strike a balance between getting enough oxygen and getting rid of enough CO2. If your lung capacity increases, your ability to get rid of CO2 decreases at the same time as the ability to take in oxygen decreases. But if you give pure oxygen, breathing slows and you can no longer get rid of CO2 fast enough, despite not breathing any in.
There are occasional deaths reported from young athletes who, as a stunt, breath pure O2 immediately before or after endurance sporting events. I suspect the cause goes something like this: body tissue gets saturated with O2, lungs 'believe' they can reduce activity accordingly, but then fall well below what is necessary to expel the rapid production of CO2 from the sporting event. The CO2 builds up rapidly causing acidosis which causes bleeding in the lungs and airway, victim drowns in their own blood.
 
  • #13
That's because it is irrelevant whether the oxygen content has changed or not.

I think it's fair to say the situation is complicated. I find the explanation of inabiltiy to excrete carbon dioxide persuasive, but there seem to be contrary reports with both oxygen and carbon dioxide.

I can't agree with the above statement. Otherwise there would be no point in oxygen treatment. But see my last comment, oxygen is sometimes poisonous.

I took some time to look at your references.
The inspectapedia one contradicted itself.
The others were quite interesting, thank you.

I also googled carbon dioxide poisoning as suggested and came up with some interesting controversy about several things including the mechanism.

Googling carbon dioxide narcosis or carbon dioxide retention reveals significant controversy about the mechanism you suggest, although there is no doubt that at a local partial pressure equal to few percentage points of carbon dioxide, the body can have trouble excreting carbon dioxide and can suffer increasing symptoms up to and including death.

Wikipedia for example does not exclude the alternative explanation, that I was taught in my diving training.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CO₂_retention

Googling oxygen poisoning also produces interesting results.
 
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  • #14
mgb_phys said:
Normal breathing is around 6l/min and the air you breath out is about 5% CO2
So a room W=2.5metre x L=3.5m x H=2.4m = 21m^3 = 21,000l

So you would have breathed all the air in the room in 21000/6 min = 3500min = 60hours
At that point the air would be 5% CO2 which is toxic but not immediately fatal - you wouldn't be very well though!
Windows and doors are not airtight, so not too much of a worry.
 
  • #15
Evo said:
Windows and doors are not airtight, so not too much of a worry.
Yes. Here is a study/survey of infiltration rates in real houses: http://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyNET.exe/...ckDesc=Results page&MaximumPages=1&ZyEntry=23

Basically, it says if your house is in the best 5% of houses in the US, it'll have an infiltration rate of about .15 air changes per hour. For a 1500 square foot house with 8.5' ceilings (my townhouse), that's 31 cubic feet of air per minute. Humans breathe about 0.25 cubic feet of air per minute.
 
  • #16
russ_watters said:
Basically, it is saying that if you have a reduced lung capacity, it gets tough to strike a balance between getting enough oxygen and getting rid of enough CO2. If your lung capacity increases, your ability to get rid of CO2 decreases at the same time as the ability to take in oxygen decreases. But if you give pure oxygen, breathing slows and you can no longer get rid of CO2 fast enough, despite not breathing any in.

mheslep said:
body tissue gets saturated with O2, lungs 'believe' they can reduce activity accordingly, but then fall well below what is necessary to expel the rapid production of CO2 from the sporting event. The CO2 builds up rapidly causing acidosis which causes bleeding in the lungs and airway, victim drowns in their own blood.

Interesting. I always thought increased breathing speed is a response to the lowered pH level, not amount of oxygen in the blood. That means high level of carbon dioxide should immediately speed up breathing, as the blood pH goes down (bicarbonate buffer at action).

I remember seeing movies of training that was done somewhere in sixties or even fifties with military pilots. They were put in an oxygen mask in a room filled with nitrogen, then they were asked to remove the mask and to perform some simple task (I think it was writing list of numbers, 1, 2, 3 and so on). They didn't start to breath rapidly, as they had no problem with carbon dioxide build up, and they were passing out not even knowing what is happening, as they run out of oxygen. Obviously their bodies were not aware of the problem.

I think the idea was to help them learn early symptoms of the lack of oxygen, so that they can took countermeasures in high level flights, or something like that.
 
  • #17
Not anything scientific here, but many years ago I was calibrating the temperature controller on a smaller bench-sized temperature chamber. The cooling was done with CO2 from a large cylinder. I had just done a cold cycle, turned the unit on to heat, turned it off again immediately and removed the door that covered the entire front of the chamber. As I squatted down in front of the chamber to set the door on the floor under the bench I took a breath.
I immediately jumped straight up, my heart pounding, and my entire body screaming at me, while my lungs fought to get some air. It was the most panic producing sensation I have ever experienced in my life.
What had happened was, when I took the door off, the chamber full of CO2 had cascaded out over the edge of the bench and rolled down over my head just as I breathed in. I got a lung full of 100% CO2.
As I came up I got a lung full of normal air and the effect was instantly gone. I just stood there with my heart pounding, realizing what had happened, laughing a little at my panic.

If you want to torture someone, don't use water boarding, just spray a CO2 extinguisher into a bucket and with them secured down, dump it over their head. They will tell you anything you want to know.
 
  • #18
I don't have any references, but I'm almost certain I read that the real danger of a confined space is CO2 buildup (and not the classical "running out of air").
Which is why CO2 scrubbers are so vital on submarines and spacecraft .
They have plenty of bottled oxygen, it's the CO2 that's the problem.
 
  • #19
DarioC said:
I immediately jumped straight up, my heart pounding, and my entire body screaming at me, while my lungs fought to get some air.
The signal to breath is caused by the buildup of CO2 in your blood, so breathing a high concentration of CO2 fools this response into thinking that you really need another breath - however much O2 you still have. Your breath reflex is triggered by blood pH , CO2 makes your blood more acidic.

There is a medical condition where this doesn't work and you rely on the level of Oxygen - so you give a victim of an accident pure oxygen and they stop breathing!
 
  • #20
russ_watters said:
<snip>
So CO2 is toxic because the hemoglobin needs to be able to hang on to both CO2 and O2 at the same time, but a small increase in CO2 concentration in the air makes the hemoglobin not get rid of CO2 fast enough. So while it can be said that the CO2 is displacing the O2 in your blood it isn't necessarily because it is displacing the O2 in the air because a small increase in ambient CO2 has a large effect on your blood's ability to get rid of it.

I don't think that's correct- CO2 balance is related to pH control, since our bodies use bicarbonate as a buffer. At least, that's the role of CO2 in mammalian cell culture.

IIRC, that's also why (chronically) breathing in too *high* a concentration of O2 is dangerous- it displaces the CO2, changing the pH levels.
 
  • #21
Andy Resnick said:
I don't think that's correct- CO2 balance is related to pH control, since our bodies use bicarbonate as a buffer. At least, that's the role of CO2 in mammalian cell culture.

IIRC, that's also why (chronically) breathing in too *high* a concentration of O2 is dangerous- it displaces the CO2, changing the pH levels.

You're correct about breathing high concentrations of O2 being dangerous, in that it suppresses the respiratory drive. But the mechanism is a response to arterial blood O2 levels sensed by the carotid bodies, not to pH.

http://jap.physiology.org/cgi/reprint/88/6/2287 (Scroll down.)
 
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  • #22
This is a practical question for Russ Waters,
Basically, it is saying that if you have a reduced lung capacity, it gets tough to strike a balance between getting enough oxygen and getting rid of enough CO2. If your lung capacity increases, your ability to get rid of CO2 decreases at the same time as the ability to take in oxygen decreases.

I have reduced lung capacity for my age, long story, but it is not getting worse other than with normal aging. Recently got a lower bronchial infection, which pushed my lung capacity down even more. Being a lifelong hiker/bicyclist I can make better use than most from the oxygen my lungs can deliver to the bloodstream and in turn my muscles. I have an increased red cell count to compensate. I realize that I have to be free of lower bronchial fluid, inflamation, with that under control before I attempt to perform a fairly difficult task that I will describe below:

I want to know when performing sustained climbing (bicycle) at what for most people would be say a 50% pace, how to best get rid of CO2 and maximize the amount of O2 to my legs. I hate feeling breathless, and want to find a "balance" if there is one. I have a little goal of climbing a mountain via access road (smooth, no mountain biking, hehe), twice in one day, two way access roads, one from each side Will an inhaler help (albuterol), or vasodilator, niacin, niaspan, etc... Any breathing and breathe recovery techniques you can suggest. I will take ever little bit of help I can get.

The scary part is when I get out of breath, because I push too hard and don't realize it, and then the recovery is too slow, and panic starts to set in, that's the thing I want to get a handle on most, push, hard but not too hard to get to that point, does that make sense ?

Thanks...

Rhody...
 
  • #23
DarioC said:
Not anything scientific here, but many years ago I was calibrating the temperature controller on a smaller bench-sized temperature chamber. The cooling was done with CO2 from a large cylinder. I had just done a cold cycle, turned the unit on to heat, turned it off again immediately and removed the door that covered the entire front of the chamber. As I squatted down in front of the chamber to set the door on the floor under the bench I took a breath.
I immediately jumped straight up, my heart pounding, and my entire body screaming at me, while my lungs fought to get some air. It was the most panic producing sensation I have ever experienced in my life.
What had happened was, when I took the door off, the chamber full of CO2 had cascaded out over the edge of the bench and rolled down over my head just as I breathed in. I got a lung full of 100% CO2.
As I came up I got a lung full of normal air and the effect was instantly gone. I just stood there with my heart pounding, realizing what had happened, laughing a little at my panic.

If you want to torture someone, don't use water boarding, just spray a CO2 extinguisher into a bucket and with them secured down, dump it over their head. They will tell you anything you want to know.

yes, CO2 is actually used as a way to induce anxiety/panic.

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?scr...1806-37132009000700012&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en
 
  • #24
Proton Soup said:
yes, CO2 is actually used as a way to induce anxiety/panic.

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?scr...1806-37132009000700012&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en

Proton,

Now I feel better, NOT... Had a similar thing happen while snorkeling 300 yards offshore, dove down and when I came up could not catch my breath, (due to lung condition) barely made it back to shore, and thought on the way I would not make it, (didn't realize it was due to Co2 buildup) very scary.

Rhody...
 
  • #25
rhody said:
Now I feel better, NOT...

really? i think knowing is half the battle.

and oddly enough, i think i was a much calmer person as a kid that could do two laps under water at our community pool. would be interesting to see a study on free divers and incidence of anxiety/depression.

also, remember that just having your torso under the surface makes inspiration more difficult. maybe you were out of shape.
 

1. What is CO2 build up in bedroom?

CO2 build up in bedroom refers to the accumulation of carbon dioxide gas in an enclosed space, specifically a bedroom. This can occur due to poor ventilation or the presence of sources that emit CO2, such as humans, pets, and plants.

2. Is CO2 build up in bedroom harmful?

Yes, CO2 build up in bedroom can be harmful as it can lead to an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air, causing symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, and fatigue. In extreme cases, it can even lead to loss of consciousness or death.

3. What are the sources of CO2 in a bedroom?

The main sources of CO2 in a bedroom are humans and pets, as we exhale carbon dioxide as a byproduct of respiration. Plants also release CO2 at night through the process of respiration. Other sources can include gas stoves, fireplaces, and other household appliances.

4. How can I prevent CO2 build up in my bedroom?

To prevent CO2 build up in your bedroom, it is important to ensure proper ventilation. This can be achieved by opening windows and doors to allow for fresh air circulation, using exhaust fans in the bathroom and kitchen, and using air purifiers or plants that can absorb CO2. It is also important to avoid overcrowding and limit the use of gas-powered appliances in the bedroom.

5. Can a CO2 detector help in monitoring CO2 levels in the bedroom?

Yes, a CO2 detector can be a helpful tool in monitoring CO2 levels in the bedroom. These devices measure the concentration of CO2 in the air and can alert you if it reaches a dangerous level. However, it is important to note that CO2 detectors should not be relied upon as the sole method of prevention and proper ventilation is still crucial.

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