DaveC426913
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This is about the physics of a molecular sieve, but since it is a fictional technology, I'm obliged to put it in Sci-fi.
It has been a long time since I read Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars series. They had masks that allowed them to breathe in the modified - yet still rarefied - Martian atmosphere. The idea was that the masks preferentially let oxygen through but blocked CO2. (They were Areforming Mars - releasing oxygen into the atmo).
I am assuming the masks are using some passive technology , not an active pump that forces oxygen into the mask.
It seems to me that such a mask would have two major side-effects:
So the masks would press on their face with 4PSI. For a mask that covers, say, 20 square inches of their face, that would be 80 pounds of pressure, no?
I'm not sure to work out how hard it would be to actually breathe. They're basically trying to breathe a 1% oxygen atmo.
It has been a long time since I read Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars series. They had masks that allowed them to breathe in the modified - yet still rarefied - Martian atmosphere. The idea was that the masks preferentially let oxygen through but blocked CO2. (They were Areforming Mars - releasing oxygen into the atmo).
I am assuming the masks are using some passive technology , not an active pump that forces oxygen into the mask.
It seems to me that such a mask would have two major side-effects:
- it would be crammed on the user's face, like a dive mask, due to the partial pressure of the CO2. The mask would experience what is efetiely a vacuum inside equivalent to the partial pressue of the CO2.
- the user would feel like he is suffocating all the time, they would have to suck on the mask with force to get oxygen into his lungs.
So the masks would press on their face with 4PSI. For a mask that covers, say, 20 square inches of their face, that would be 80 pounds of pressure, no?
I'm not sure to work out how hard it would be to actually breathe. They're basically trying to breathe a 1% oxygen atmo.