| Grass attack Current Biology, Volume 17, Issue 19, 9 October 2007, Pages R818-R819 Nigel Williams Summary A new study finds that raised atmospheric carbon dioxide in an experimental plot of Colorado grassland does not affect species diversity but provides a great boost to the shrub species. reports. Summary | Full Text | PDF (582 kb) |
| A Mathematical Model of the Controlled Plant of the Réspiratory System Biophysical Journal, Volume 11, Issue 10, 1 October 1971, Pages 810-834 T.J. Trueb, N.S. Cherniack, A.F. D'Souza and A.P. Fishman Abstract Ability to predict the dynamic response of oxygen, carbon dioxide tensions, and pH in blood and tissues to abrupt changes in ventilation is important in the mathematical modeling of the respiratory system. In this study, the controlled plant (the amount and distribution of O and CO) of the respiratory system is modeled. Although the body tissues are divided into a finite number of “compartments” (three tissue groups), in contrast to earlier models, the blood and tissue gas tensions within each compartment are considered to be continuously distributed in time and in one spatial coordinate. The mass conservation equations for oxygen and carbon dioxide involved in the blood-tissue gas exchange are described by a set of partial differential equations which take into account convection of O and CO caused by the flow of blood as well as diffusion due to local tension gradients. Nonlinear algebraic equations for the dissociation curves, which take into account the Haldane and Bohr effects in blood, are used to obtain the relationships between concentrations and partial pressures. Time-variable delays caused by the arterial and venous transport of the respiratory gases are also included. The model so constructed successfully reproduced actual O and CO tensions in arterial blood, and in muscle venous and mixed venous blood when ventilation was abruptly changed. Abstract | PDF (1337 kb) |
| Atmospheric carbon dioxide at record high Current Biology, Volume 18, Issue 11, 3 June 2008, Pages R445 Nigel Williams Summary Researchers are finding the rate of increase of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is rising and methane is on the increase too, raising growing concerns about the environmental impacts and efforts to cut emissions. reports. Summary | Full Text | PDF (362 kb) |
Copyright © 1967 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 7, Issue 6, 827-851, 1 November 1967
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(67)86624-4
Articles
E.E. Spaeth and S.K. Friedlander
Measurements were made of exchange rates of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and krypton-85 with blood at 37.5°C. Gas transfer took place across a 1 mil silicone rubber membrane. The blood was in a rotating disk boundary layer flow, and the controlling resistance to transfer was the concentration boundary layer. Measured rates were compared with rates predicted from the equation of convective diffusion using velocities derived from the Navier-Stokes equations and diffusivities calculated from the theory for conduction in a heterogeneous medium. The measured absorption rate of krypton-85 was closely predicted by this model. Significant deposition of material onto the membrane surface, resulting in an increased transfer resistance, occurred in one experiment with blood previously used in a nonmembrane type artificial lung. The desorption rate of oxygen from blood at low Po21 was up to four times the corresponding transfer rate of inert gas. This effect is described somewhat conservatively by a local equilibrium form of the convective diffusion equation. The carbon dioxide transfer rate in blood near venous conditions was about twice that of inert gas, a rate significantly greater than predicted by the local equilibrium theory. It should be possible to apply these theoretical methods to predict exchange rates with blood flowing in systems of other geometries.