Diffusion is efficient in small organisms, but not big ones
Even a huge amoeba can diffuse oxygen through its body in about 3 seconds. If I could do that, I probably wouldn’t bother with lungs either. A similar calculation shows that carbon dioxide can also be diffused out of the cell without assistance.
Lots of other, larger animals do exchange gases without lungs – but they tend to be large in only one or two dimensions, so that gases can diffuse through the smaller third dimension. Thus, flatworms, nematodes, and many other kinds of worm-like animals don’t need complicated respiratory systems.
How long would it take for oxygen to diffuse from the outside to the middle of a mouse if its body has a 1 cm radius? (Please, just ignore that the mouse is more irregularly shaped than a cylinder and contains numerous barriers to diffusion!!)
(To make this problem interactive, turn on javascript!... may not work in Internet Explorer )
- I need a hint ... : (1 cm)2 is 1000 times more than (0.01cm)2
in the amoeba calculation
I think I have the answer: T = (Δx) 2 / 2D =
(1cm)2 / (2*1.8*10-5cm2/sec ) =
27,778 sec =
7.7 hours
How about a rhino whose body had a radius of 75 cm?
(To make this problem interactive, turn on javascript!... may not work in Internet Explorer )
- I need a hint ... : (75cm)2 is 5625 times as big as the (1cm)2
in the mouse calculation.
I think I have the answer: T = (Δx) 2 / 2D =
(75cm)2 / (2*1.8*10-5cm2/sec ) =
1.6*108 sec =
43,402 hours =
almost 5 years
Woah! Even this very tiny mouse cannot survive on diffusion alone, and with a rhinoceros,
the question is clearly preposterous!
Copyright University of Maryland, 2007
You may link to this site for educational purposes.
Please do not copy without permission
requests/questions/feedback email: mathbench@umd.edu