RI 2670 Possibilities In The Use Of Helium-Oxygen Mixtures As A Mitigation Of Caisson Desease

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 1150 KB
- Publication Date:
- Feb 1, 1925
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines, in conducting investigations of atmospheres in mines and tunnels for the purposes of determining and combating hazards to the health and safety of workers, has from time to time closely cooperated with municipal, State and Federal agencies in safety work in engineering and ventilating probleme.
Recently the writers have conducted experiments with animals and men breathing helium-oxygen mixtures under pressure. The object of this work was to determine whether helium-oxygen atmospheres can be utilized to advantage in place of normal air for caisson and diving work. In such work the permissible pressures and times of compression and decompression are limited by the physiological effects on man. The major effect is that the nitrogen, (which is the inert con- stituent of normal air and is absorbed by the body tissues and fluids in abnormal amounts when under pressure,) tends to form bubbles in the tissues on too rapid discompression from high pressures.
The Bureau of Mines is interested in this problem on account of the pos- sibilities of mitigating caisson illness in tunnel construction and other engine eering operations requiring men to work in compressed air. In addition, the Navy Department is interested on account of the possibilities for extending the range of salvaging and marine engineering operations. The results of the experiments conducted by the writers lead to the following conclusions:
Helium is without odor or taste and has physical properties which promise to be of interest physiologically and which have been found to have possibilities of creat practical use, especially in making a synthetic atmosphere that will re- duce the hazard of caisson disease. The substitution of helium for the nitrogen ordinarily present in the air we breathe has been found to result in an atmosphere which it as respirable as that provided by nature. The results obtained indicate that helium not only has the advantage of being less soluble than nitrogen, but
Citation
APA:
(1925) RI 2670 Possibilities In The Use Of Helium-Oxygen Mixtures As A Mitigation Of Caisson DeseaseMLA: RI 2670 Possibilities In The Use Of Helium-Oxygen Mixtures As A Mitigation Of Caisson Desease. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1925.