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Chapter 14 of 19
NCERT Solutions

Breathing and Exchange of Gases

Rajasthan Board · Class 11 · Biology

NCERT Solutions for Breathing and Exchange of Gases — Rajasthan Board Class 11 Biology.

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EXERCISES

1Define vital capacity. What is its significance?Show solution
Given / Concept: Vital capacity is a pulmonary volume measured using a spirometer.

Definition: Vital Capacity (VC) is the maximum volume of air a person can exhale after a maximum inhalation (or vice versa). It is the sum of:
VC=IRV+TV+ERVVC = IRV + TV + ERV
where IRV = Inspiratory Reserve Volume (~2500 mL), TV = Tidal Volume (~500 mL), ERV = Expiratory Reserve Volume (~1000 mL).

Thus, VC2500+500+1000=4000 mL (approximately 3.5 – 4.5 L)VC \approx 2500 + 500 + 1000 = 4000 \text{ mL (approximately 3.5 – 4.5 L)}.

Significance:
1. It is of great clinical significance as it indicates the functional capacity of the lungs.
2. It reflects the overall health of the respiratory system — a reduced VC indicates restrictive or obstructive lung diseases (e.g., fibrosis, emphysema).
3. Athletes and trained individuals have a higher VC, indicating better respiratory efficiency.
4. It helps physicians assess the extent of lung damage and monitor recovery.

Conclusion: Vital capacity is the maximum usable volume of air in the lungs and serves as an important diagnostic indicator of respiratory health.
2State the volume of air remaining in the lungs after a normal breathing.Show solution
Given: We need to find the volume of air remaining in the lungs after a normal expiration (i.e., after normal tidal breathing).

Concept: After a normal expiration, the volume of air that remains in the lungs is called the Functional Residual Capacity (FRC).

FRC=ERV+RVFRC = ERV + RV

where:
- ERV (Expiratory Reserve Volume) 1000\approx 1000 mL
- RV (Residual Volume) 1100\approx 1100 mL

FRC=1000+1100=2100 mL (approximately)FRC = 1000 + 1100 = 2100 \text{ mL (approximately)}

Note: The Residual Volume (RV) alone (~1100 mL) is the air that can never be expelled even after the most forceful expiration. After a normal expiration, FRC (~2100 mL) remains in the lungs.

Conclusion: Approximately 2100 mL of air remains in the lungs after normal (quiet) expiration.
3Diffusion of gases occurs in the alveolar region only and not in the other parts of respiratory system. Why?Show solution
Given: Gas exchange (diffusion of O2O_2 and CO2CO_2) occurs only in the alveolar region.

Reason — Structural features of alveoli that facilitate diffusion:

1. Very thin walls: The alveolar walls are extremely thin (single layer of squamous epithelium, ~0.2 µm), minimising the diffusion distance.

2. Rich blood supply: Alveoli are surrounded by a dense network of pulmonary capillaries, maintaining a steep concentration gradient.

3. Large surface area: The approximately 300 million alveoli provide an enormous surface area (~70 m²) for diffusion.

4. Partial pressure gradient: In the alveoli, pO2pO_2 is high (~104 mmHg) and pCO2pCO_2 is low (~40 mmHg) compared to deoxygenated blood (pO240pO_2 \approx 40 mmHg, pCO245pCO_2 \approx 45 mmHg), creating a favourable gradient.

Why NOT in other parts (trachea, bronchi, bronchioles):
- These are conducting airways (dead space) with thick, cartilaginous or muscular walls — diffusion distance is too large.
- They are not surrounded by capillaries in the same way.
- No significant partial pressure gradient exists there.
- Their primary function is to conduct air, not exchange gases.

Conclusion: The unique structural and physiological features of the alveoli — thin walls, large surface area, rich vascularisation, and favourable partial pressure gradients — make them the exclusive site of gaseous exchange.
4What are the major transport mechanisms for CO2\mathrm{CO}_{2}? Explain.Show solution
Given: Carbon dioxide produced in tissues must be transported to the lungs for elimination.

Three major mechanisms for CO2CO_2 transport:

1. As Bicarbonate ions (HCO3HCO_3^-) — ~70%

This is the most important mechanism. CO2CO_2 diffuses into RBCs and reacts with water in the presence of the enzyme carbonic anhydrase:
CO2+H2Ocarbonic anhydraseH2CO3H++HCO3CO_2 + H_2O \xrightarrow{\text{carbonic anhydrase}} H_2CO_3 \rightarrow H^+ + HCO_3^-
HCO3HCO_3^- ions move out of RBCs into plasma (in exchange for ClCl^- ions — chloride shift). In the lungs, the reverse reaction occurs and CO2CO_2 is released.

2. As Carbamino-haemoglobin — ~20–25%

CO2CO_2 binds directly to the amino groups of haemoglobin (and plasma proteins) to form carbamino-haemoglobin:
CO2+HbHbCO2 (carbamino-haemoglobin)CO_2 + Hb \rightleftharpoons HbCO_2 \text{ (carbamino-haemoglobin)}
This binding is favoured at high pCO2pCO_2 (tissues) and dissociation is favoured at low pCO2pCO_2 (alveoli).

3. Dissolved in plasma — ~7%

A small amount of CO2CO_2 (~7%) is transported in a dissolved state directly in the blood plasma.

Summary Table:
| Mechanism | Percentage |
|---|---|
| As HCO3HCO_3^- (bicarbonate) | ~70% |
| As carbamino-haemoglobin | ~20–25% |
| Dissolved in plasma | ~7% |

Conclusion: CO2CO_2 is transported primarily as bicarbonate ions (~70%), with significant contributions from carbamino-haemoglobin (~20–25%) and dissolved form (~7%).
5What will be the pO2\mathrm{pO}_{2} and pCO2\mathrm{pCO}_{2} in the atmospheric air compared to those in the alveolar air?
(i) pO2\mathrm{pO}_{2} lesser, pCO2\mathrm{pCO}_{2} higher
(ii) pO2\mathrm{pO}_{2} higher, pCO2\mathrm{pCO}_{2} lesser
(iii) pO2\mathrm{pO}_{2} higher, pCO2\mathrm{pCO}_{2} higher
(iv) pO2\mathrm{pO}_{2} lesser, pCO2\mathrm{pCO}_{2} lesser
Show solution
Correct Answer: (ii) pO2pO_2 higher, pCO2pCO_2 lesser

Justification:

| Gas | Atmospheric air | Alveolar air |
|---|---|---|
| pO2pO_2 | ~159 mmHg | ~104 mmHg |
| pCO2pCO_2 | ~0.3 mmHg | ~40 mmHg |

- In atmospheric air, pO2pO_2 (~159 mmHg) is higher than in alveolar air (~104 mmHg) because O2O_2 is continuously being absorbed by the blood from the alveoli.
- In atmospheric air, pCO2pCO_2 (~0.3 mmHg) is lesser than in alveolar air (~40 mmHg) because CO2CO_2 is continuously being released into the alveoli from the blood.

Hence, compared to alveolar air, atmospheric air has higher pO2pO_2 and lesser pCO2pCO_2.
6Explain the process of inspiration under normal conditions.Show solution
Given: Inspiration (inhalation) is the process of taking atmospheric air into the lungs.

Concept: Inspiration is an active process that occurs when the atmospheric pressure exceeds the intrapulmonary pressure, creating a pressure gradient.

Step-by-step process of inspiration:

Step 1 — Contraction of the diaphragm:
The dome-shaped diaphragm contracts and flattens, increasing the vertical diameter of the thoracic cavity.

Step 2 — Contraction of external intercostal muscles:
The external intercostal muscles contract, pulling the ribs and sternum upward and outward. This increases the antero-posterior and lateral diameters of the thoracic cavity.

Step 3 — Increase in thoracic volume:
Due to the above muscular contractions, the volume of the thoracic cavity increases.

Step 4 — Decrease in intrapulmonary pressure:
As thoracic volume increases, the lungs expand (due to the negative intrapleural pressure). This causes the intrapulmonary (intra-alveolar) pressure to fall below atmospheric pressure:
P_{\text{intrapulmonary}} < P_{\text{atmospheric}}
(Intrapulmonary pressure drops by ~1–3 mmHg below atmospheric pressure)

Step 5 — Air flows in:
Air moves from the region of higher pressure (atmosphere) to lower pressure (alveoli) — i.e., air rushes into the lungs until pressures equalise.

\text{Atmospheric pressure} > \text{Intrapulmonary pressure} \Rightarrow \text{Air flows IN}

Conclusion: Inspiration is an active, muscle-driven process. Contraction of the diaphragm and external intercostal muscles increases thoracic volume, decreases intrapulmonary pressure, and causes air to flow into the lungs.
7How is respiration regulated?Show solution
Given: Respiration must be precisely regulated to meet the body's metabolic demands.

Regulation of Respiration:

1. Neural Regulation — Respiratory Rhythm Centre (Medulla oblongata):
- A specialised centre in the medulla oblongata (part of the brain stem) called the respiratory rhythm centre is primarily responsible for regulating the rhythm of respiration.
- It generates rhythmic nerve impulses that control the rate and depth of breathing.

2. Pneumotaxic Centre (Pons):
- Located in the pons region of the brain.
- It can moderate the functions of the respiratory rhythm centre.
- It signals to reduce the duration of inspiration, thereby altering the respiratory rate.

3. Chemosensitive Area (Medulla):
- A region adjacent to the rhythm centre is highly sensitive to CO2CO_2 and H+H^+ ions.
- An increase in CO2CO_2 or H+H^+ concentration in blood activates this area, which in turn signals the rhythm centre to increase the rate and depth of breathing to eliminate excess CO2CO_2.
- O2O_2 levels do not directly stimulate this centre significantly under normal conditions.

4. Receptors in Aortic Arch and Carotid Body:
- Peripheral chemoreceptors in the aortic arch and carotid body can also recognise changes in CO2CO_2, H+H^+, and O2O_2 concentrations.
- They send signals to the rhythm centre for appropriate adjustments.

5. Stretch Receptors in Lungs (Hering-Breuer Reflex):
- Receptors in the walls of the bronchi and bronchioles are activated when the lungs are over-inflated.
- They send signals to stop further inspiration, preventing over-distension.

Conclusion: Respiration is regulated by the respiratory rhythm centre in the medulla, modulated by the pneumotaxic centre in the pons, and fine-tuned by chemosensitive areas and peripheral receptors that respond to changes in CO2CO_2, H+H^+, and O2O_2 levels in the blood.
8What is the effect of pCO2\mathrm{pCO}_{2} on oxygen transport?Show solution
Given: We need to understand how pCO2pCO_2 affects the transport of O2O_2 by haemoglobin.

Concept — Bohr Effect:
The effect of pCO2pCO_2 (and H+H^+) on oxygen transport is explained by the Bohr Effect.

Effect of increased pCO2pCO_2 (at tissues):
- At the tissues, cellular respiration produces large amounts of CO2CO_2, so pCO2pCO_2 is high.
- High pCO2pCO_2 leads to increased H+H^+ concentration (acidic pH) as:
CO2+H2OH2CO3H++HCO3CO_2 + H_2O \rightarrow H_2CO_3 \rightarrow H^+ + HCO_3^-
- High pCO2pCO_2 and high H+H^+ decrease the affinity of haemoglobin for O2O_2.
- This causes dissociation of oxyhaemoglobin and release of O2O_2 to the tissues:
HbO2high pCO2, low pHHb+O2HbO_2 \xrightarrow{\text{high } pCO_2, \text{ low pH}} Hb + O_2

Effect of decreased pCO2pCO_2 (at alveoli):
- In the alveoli, CO2CO_2 is expelled, so pCO2pCO_2 is low and pO2pO_2 is high.
- Low pCO2pCO_2 and low H+H^+ increase the affinity of haemoglobin for O2O_2.
- This promotes loading of O2O_2 onto haemoglobin to form oxyhaemoglobin:
Hb+O2low pCO2, high pO2HbO2Hb + O_2 \xrightarrow{\text{low } pCO_2, \text{ high } pO_2} HbO_2

Conclusion: High pCO2pCO_2 (and low pH) decreases haemoglobin's affinity for O2O_2, promoting O2O_2 release at tissues. Low pCO2pCO_2 increases haemoglobin's affinity for O2O_2, promoting O2O_2 loading at the alveoli. This is the Bohr Effect and it ensures efficient O2O_2 delivery to metabolically active tissues.
9What happens to the respiratory process in a man going up a hill?Show solution
Given: A person is ascending a hill (high altitude).

Changes in respiratory process at high altitude:

1. Decrease in atmospheric pressure and pO2pO_2:
As altitude increases, atmospheric pressure decreases. Consequently, the partial pressure of O2O_2 (pO2pO_2) in the atmosphere decreases.

2. Reduced O2O_2 availability:
Lower pO2pO_2 means less O2O_2 diffuses into the alveoli and subsequently into the blood. The blood carries less O2O_2 to the tissues — a condition called hypoxia.

3. Increased rate and depth of breathing (Hyperventilation):
The chemosensitive area in the medulla detects low O2O_2 and rising CO2CO_2 / H+H^+ levels. It signals the respiratory rhythm centre to increase the rate and depth of breathing (hyperventilation) to compensate.

4. Increased heart rate:
The heart rate also increases to pump more blood and deliver adequate O2O_2 to tissues.

5. Long-term acclimatisation:
Over time (days to weeks), the body acclimatises:
- Increased production of RBCs (erythropoiesis stimulated by erythropoietin).
- Increased haemoglobin concentration in blood.
- Increased capillary density in tissues.
- Breathing rate gradually normalises.

Conclusion: Going up a hill causes a decrease in pO2pO_2, leading to hypoxia. The body immediately compensates by increasing the rate and depth of breathing (hyperventilation). With prolonged stay, physiological acclimatisation occurs through increased RBC production and haemoglobin levels.
10What is the site of gaseous exchange in an insect?Show solution
Given: We need to identify the site of gas exchange in insects.

Answer:

In insects, the site of gaseous exchange is the tracheoles (the finest terminal branches of the tracheal system).

Explanation:
- Insects have a well-developed tracheal system — a network of air tubes (tracheae) that open to the outside through small pores called spiracles on the body surface.
- The tracheae branch repeatedly into finer tubes called tracheoles.
- The tracheoles are in direct contact with individual cells and tissues.
- Gaseous exchange (O2O_2 in, CO2CO_2 out) occurs directly between the tracheoles and the body cells by diffusion — without the involvement of blood.
- This is a very efficient system as it delivers O2O_2 directly to the respiring cells.

Conclusion: The tracheoles are the actual sites of gaseous exchange in insects. The tracheal system bypasses the circulatory system and delivers O2O_2 directly to the tissues.
11Define oxygen dissociation curve. Can you suggest any reason for its sigmoidal pattern?Show solution
Definition:
The oxygen dissociation curve (or oxygen-haemoglobin dissociation curve) is a graph that shows the relationship between the partial pressure of oxygen (pO2pO_2) (on the x-axis) and the percentage saturation of haemoglobin with O2O_2 (on the y-axis). It represents the affinity of haemoglobin for oxygen at different pO2pO_2 values.

Sigmoidal (S-shaped) Pattern — Reason:

The curve is sigmoidal due to the cooperative binding of O2O_2 to haemoglobin, which is a tetramer with four haem groups (four subunits: 2α2\alpha and 2β2\beta).

Explanation of the shape:

1. Lower portion (low pO2pO_2, 0–40 mmHg): At low pO2pO_2, haemoglobin has a low affinity for O2O_2. The first O2O_2 molecule binds with difficulty (slow initial binding). The curve rises slowly.

2. Middle steep portion (40–70 mmHg): Once the first O2O_2 molecule binds to one haem group, it causes a conformational change in the haemoglobin molecule (T-state → R-state), which increases the affinity of the remaining haem groups for O2O_2. This cooperative binding causes rapid loading of O2O_2 — the curve rises steeply.

3. Upper plateau (above ~70 mmHg): At high pO2pO_2 (as in alveoli, ~104 mmHg), haemoglobin becomes nearly fully saturated (~97–98%). The curve flattens as all binding sites are occupied.

Physiological significance of the sigmoidal shape:
- The steep middle portion ensures efficient O2O_2 loading in the lungs.
- The lower plateau ensures efficient O2O_2 unloading at tissues (where pO2pO_2 is ~40 mmHg).

Conclusion: The sigmoidal shape of the oxygen dissociation curve is due to the cooperative binding of O2O_2 to the four subunits of haemoglobin — binding of each O2O_2 molecule increases the affinity of the remaining subunits for O2O_2.
12Have you heard about hypoxia? Try to gather information about it, and discuss with your friends.Show solution
Information about Hypoxia:

Definition:
Hypoxia is a condition in which the body or a region of the body is deprived of adequate oxygen supply at the tissue level, despite potentially normal blood flow.

Types of Hypoxia:
1. Hypoxic hypoxia: Due to low pO2pO_2 in inspired air (e.g., at high altitudes). Also caused by respiratory diseases.
2. Anaemic hypoxia: Due to reduced haemoglobin content or defective haemoglobin (e.g., anaemia, CO poisoning — CO binds Hb with 200× more affinity than O2O_2).
3. Stagnant (ischaemic) hypoxia: Due to poor blood circulation (e.g., heart failure, shock).
4. Histotoxic hypoxia: Tissues are unable to use O2O_2 even when supplied (e.g., cyanide poisoning blocks cytochrome oxidase).

Causes:
- High altitude (low atmospheric pO2pO_2)
- Respiratory diseases (pneumonia, asthma, COPD)
- Anaemia
- Carbon monoxide poisoning
- Heart failure

Symptoms:
- Shortness of breath (dyspnoea)
- Rapid breathing (hyperventilation)
- Increased heart rate
- Headache, dizziness, confusion
- Bluish discolouration of skin/lips (cyanosis) in severe cases
- Loss of consciousness in extreme cases

Body's Response to Hypoxia:
- Increased breathing rate
- Increased heart rate
- Increased production of RBCs (erythropoiesis via erythropoietin)
- Increased 2,3-BPG in RBCs (reduces Hb affinity for O2O_2, promoting O2O_2 release to tissues)

Treatment:
- Supplemental oxygen therapy
- Treatment of underlying cause
- Acclimatisation at high altitudes

Conclusion: Hypoxia is a serious condition of inadequate oxygen supply to tissues. It can be caused by various factors and the body has several compensatory mechanisms to deal with it. Awareness of its symptoms is important for timely medical intervention.
13Distinguish between
(a) IRV and ERV
(b) Inspiratory capacity and Expiratory capacity.
(c) Vital capacity and Total lung capacity.
Show solution
(a) IRV (Inspiratory Reserve Volume) vs ERV (Expiratory Reserve Volume):

| Feature | IRV | ERV |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Extra volume of air that can be inspired forcefully after a normal inspiration | Extra volume of air that can be expired forcefully after a normal expiration |
| Normal value | ~2500 mL (2.5 L) | ~1000 mL (1 L) |
| Associated with | Inspiration (inhalation) | Expiration (exhalation) |
| Significance | Represents the reserve for deeper inhalation | Represents the reserve for deeper exhalation |

---

(b) Inspiratory Capacity (IC) vs Expiratory Capacity (EC):

| Feature | Inspiratory Capacity (IC) | Expiratory Capacity (EC) |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Total volume of air a person can inspire after a normal expiration | Total volume of air a person can expire after a normal inspiration |
| Formula | IC=TV+IRVIC = TV + IRV | EC=TV+ERVEC = TV + ERV |
| Normal value | 500+2500=3000\approx 500 + 2500 = 3000 mL | 500+1000=1500\approx 500 + 1000 = 1500 mL |
| Starting point | After normal expiration | After normal inspiration |

---

(c) Vital Capacity (VC) vs Total Lung Capacity (TLC):

| Feature | Vital Capacity (VC) | Total Lung Capacity (TLC) |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Maximum volume of air that can be exhaled after a maximum inhalation | Total volume of air in the lungs after a maximum inhalation |
| Formula | VC=IRV+TV+ERVVC = IRV + TV + ERV | TLC=VC+RVTLC = VC + RV or IRV+TV+ERV+RVIRV + TV + ERV + RV |
| Normal value | 4000\approx 4000 mL (3.5–4.5 L) | 5100\approx 5100 mL (4.5–6 L) |
| Includes RV? | No | Yes |
| Can be measured by spirometer? | Yes (directly) | Requires special techniques for RV |

Key difference: TLC includes the Residual Volume (RV) (~1100 mL) which cannot be expelled, while VC does not include RV.
14What is Tidal volume? Find out the Tidal volume (approximate value) for a healthy human in an hour.Show solution
Definition of Tidal Volume (TV):
Tidal Volume is the volume of air inspired or expired during a single normal (quiet) breath — i.e., without any extra effort.

TV500 mL per breath (approximately 6000–8000 mL/min)TV \approx 500 \text{ mL per breath (approximately 6000–8000 mL/min)}

Calculation of Tidal Volume in one hour:

Given:
- Tidal Volume per breath =500= 500 mL =0.5= 0.5 L
- Normal breathing rate =1216= 12–16 breaths per minute
- Let us take breathing rate =15= 15 breaths per minute (standard value)

Step 1: Calculate breaths per hour:
Breaths per hour=15×60=900 breaths/hour\text{Breaths per hour} = 15 \times 60 = 900 \text{ breaths/hour}

Step 2: Calculate total tidal volume per hour:
Total TV per hour=500 mL×900=4,50,000 mL\text{Total TV per hour} = 500 \text{ mL} \times 900 = 4,50,000 \text{ mL}

=450 L per hour= 450 \text{ L per hour}

Conclusion:
- Tidal Volume per breath \approx 500 mL
- Total Tidal Volume in one hour \approx 450 litres (for a healthy adult breathing at ~15 breaths/minute)

This value can vary slightly depending on the individual's breathing rate (12–16 breaths/min), giving a range of approximately 360 L to 480 L per hour.

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