Stupid question - is it possible to use up all the oxygen in your room?

  • Thread starter Thread starter bumclouds
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Oxygen Stupid
AI Thread Summary
Breathing in a sealed room can lead to dangerous oxygen depletion, but the critical factor is the accumulation of carbon dioxide (CO2) rather than the complete consumption of oxygen. In a completely airtight environment, oxygen levels can drop to a point where hemoglobin cannot effectively transport oxygen, leading to suffocation. The time it takes to reach dangerous levels of CO2 and reduced oxygen depends on the room's airtightness and ventilation. Even a small gap can allow for some air exchange, making it unlikely to reach critical levels in a typical room. A highly airtight structure, such as certain buildings designed for specific purposes, would require continuous ventilation to maintain safe air quality.
bumclouds
Messages
24
Reaction score
0
I have a stupid question to ask you all.

Let's just say that you shut your door, and then shut all your windows so there isn't any ventilation and stayed in your room for several days. Could you end up breathing until you've reduced the oxygen to dangerous levels?
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
If it's completely sealed and there's no other source of oxygen, then sure.
 
And how long would it take to run out of oxygen?

I often wonder if there's a tiny little gap of say, 1 square cm to the outside world, would you rate of oxygen consumption beat the inflow of oxygen?
 
Stupid question, you bet you!
Not so stupid answer though:
Go study partial differential equations, and determine for yourself the air flow given the size of the hole, temperature, etc... after factoring in all these variables then determine how big the hole has to be. Btw, in a room built out of wood, the oxygen would still get through, so this needs to be a room of plastic; why don't you tell us how big the whole has to be to substain life? Go now, study :p
 
The short answer is that you'd need a ridiculously well sealed building to create such a problem. I once ran across a building that used to be a FEMA office and it was designed pretty air tight, so it required continuous ventilation to keep the air quality acceptable.

Note, though, that you can't "use up all the oxygen" in a room: It isn't lack of oxygen that would kill you, it is too much CO2.
 
If you use completely compartmentalized room then yes. But When the O2 level decrease to certain level the partial pressure of O2 is so low that haemoglobin would not combine with oxygen, then you are just going to die before it is completely used up. So It's never going to "use up" literally.
 
I want to test a humidity sensor with one or more saturated salt solutions. The table salt that I have on hand contains one of two anticaking agents, calcium silicate or sodium aluminosilicate. Will the presence of either of these additives (or iodine for that matter) significantly affect the equilibrium humidity? I searched and all the how-to-do-it guides did not address this question. One research paper I found reported that at 1.5% w/w calcium silicate increased the deliquescent point by...

Similar threads

Back
Top