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6.4 Gas Exchange http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HiT621PrrO0 Coloring Activity – 15 minutes 6.4.1 • Ventilation • The process of moving air into and out of the lungs. • It involves muscular movement and requires energy. • It maintains a concentration gradient so that oxygen can continue diffusing into the blood. It keeps the oxygen concentration higher in the lungs than in the blood. 6.4.1 • Ventilation – 2 steps • Inspiration • Expiration 6.4.5 With a partner… • Try to figure out what happens each time you inhale and exhale. • Determine what happens to each of the following: • • • • volume of lungs Muscles around the ribcage Diaphragm Pressure in the lungs 6.4.5 • The external intercostal muscles contract and move the ribcage up and outward. • The diaphragm contracts, flattening it downward. • Both actions have the effect of increasing the volume of the chest cavity. • As the volume increases, the pressure decreases and the air flows into the lungs. Inspiration • The external intercostal muscles relax and the ribcage moves back down. • The internal intercostal muscles contract. • The diaphragm relaxes, moving it back up. • Both actions have the effect of decreasing the volume of the chest cavity. • As the volume decreases, the pressure increases and the air flows out of the lungs. Expiration 6.4.5 • http://www.footprints-science.co.uk/breathing1.htm • Why is a ventilation system necessary? • 1. To maintain a concentration gradient so that gas exchange can occur. • To keep SA:V ratio high so that diffusion can occur. 6.4.2 The Respiratory System Pharynx vs. Larynx • Gas Exchange • The movement (diffusion) of oxygen from the air in the lungs into the blood AND carbon dioxide in the opposite direction. • There are two sites for gas exchange • 1.Alveoli: Oxygen diffuses into the blood from the alveoli and carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the alveoli • 2. Tissues: Oxygen diffuses from blood into the cells and carbon dioxide diffuses from cells to the blood 6.4.1 6.4.1 Draw this! • Four features of alveoli allow efficient gas exchange • Large surface area • Thin – things can diffuse quick • Moist – gases dissolve before passing through membranes • Good blood supply – maintains the concentration gradient 6.4.3 Alveoli How many membranes must an oxygen molecule pass through in order to enter a erythrocyte? 6.4.1 • Cell Respiration • The cellular process of releasing energy from food (large organic molecules). In the presence of oxygen, 1 glucose molecule yields 36 ATP molecules. 6.4.1 • Ventilation (V), gas exchange (GE) and cell respiration(CR) are all dependent on each other. • V requires energy provided by CR. • GE depends on a concentration gradient provided by V. • CR is more efficient in the presence of oxygen which relies on GE. 6.4.1 Ventilation Where Energy Physical or Chemical Process? Gas Exchange Cell Respiration Diagram http://lgfl.skoool.co.uk/keystag 11_48 Asthma • Draw and label a diagram of the ventilation system, including trachea, lungs, bronchi, bronchioles and alveoli. 6.4.4