1959
DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1959.14.3.321
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Intrapulmonary mixing of gases studied with aerosols

Abstract: Mechanical mixture due to pulmonary flow, in contrast to mixing by molecular diffusion within the respiratory spaces, has been studied directly using aerosol inhalation. The technique uses particles, about ½ μ in diameter, which are fairly stable in the respiratory tract, and measures the concentration of aerosol during expiration with a continuous and rapid detector of scattered light and, simultaneously, the expiratory volume flow. The flow component of pulmonary ventilation is described in terms of the frac… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Since monodisperse aerosol particles 0.5-1 µm in diameter behave like a "nondiffusive gas", they can be used as tracers for studying convective gas transport [9]. In the present experiments, a small volume (bolus) of the inspired air was labelled with these particles.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Since monodisperse aerosol particles 0.5-1 µm in diameter behave like a "nondiffusive gas", they can be used as tracers for studying convective gas transport [9]. In the present experiments, a small volume (bolus) of the inspired air was labelled with these particles.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Figure 3a shows the half-width H50,c (mean±SD) of expired aerosol boluses as a function of the volumetric lung depth obtained for the 79 healthy subjects. It increased with increasing lung depth and can be approximated by a power function: H50,c = 12 Vp 0.57 (9) The relative population standard deviation (σp) was 13% for lung depth 800 cm 3 , 17% for lung depths 800 cm 3 > Vp ≥ 50 cm 3 , and 30% for Vp = 20 cm 3 . The intrasubject variability (σs) of H50,c for all lung depths was below 10% (table 3).…”
Section: Reference Valuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Monodisperse aerosol particles can be considered as a nondiffusing gas [8], and can therefore be used as a tracer…”
Section: Aerosol Bolus Dispersionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Monodisperse aerosol particles can be considered as a nondiffusing gas [8], and can therefore be used as a tracer for convective gas transport. When a small volume (bolus) of such an aerosol is injected into a single breath of clean air, convective gas mixing during respiration will cause particle transport in initially particle free air volumes within the lungs.…”
Section: Aerosol Bolus Dispersionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, it is likely that the percentage retention of particles in the human lung as a whole is minimal, or nearly so, for particles whose radius is about 0.1 a." 10 There appears to have been no systematic study of the relative rates of deposition of the vapours and the tarry particles of tobacco smoke in the human lung. The results of recent studies of physical pioperties of wood smoke might therefore be relevant.…”
Section: Smoke Vapours and Carcinogenesismentioning
confidence: 99%