Gas Exchange at the Alveoli (AQA GCSE Physical Education (PE))

Revision Note

Naomi Holyoak

Expertise

Biology

Gaseous Exchange

  • The term gas exchange refers to the exchange of gases between the air and the blood; this occurs in the alveoli of the lungs

    • Oxygen enters the blood from the air

    • Carbon dioxide leaves the blood and enters the air

  • Gas exchange occurs by the process of diffusion:

The movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration

  • The features of the alveoli assist with gas exchange:

    • Large surface area

      • There are many alveoli within the lungs, resulting in a large surface area across which diffusion can occur

    • Short diffusion distance

      • Alveoli walls and capillary walls are one cell thick, reducing the diffusion pathway for gases

      • The capillary vessels are located directly next to the alveoli to minimise the diffusion pathway

    • Many capillaries

      • This means that the alveoli have a good blood supply, maintaining oxygen and carbon dioxide concentration gradients

      • The blood arriving at the alveoli is high in carbon dioxide in comparison to the alveoli, so carbon dioxide diffuses out of the blood and into the alveoli

      • The blood is low in oxygen in comparison to the alveoli, so oxygen diffuses into the blood from the alveoli

    • High oxygen concentration

      • The process of ventilation ensures that the air in the alveoli always contains a higher concentration of oxygen than the blood; this means that oxygen diffuses into the blood

    • Layer of moisture

      • Gases in the air dissolve in this layer on the surface of the alveoli, aiding diffusion

Gas exchange in the alveoli diagram

A single alveolus with special features indicated

Alveoli are adapted to maximise gas exchange

The role of haemoglobin

  • After diffusing into the blood oxygen binds to haemoglobin within red blood cells to form oxyhaemoglobin:

oxygen + haemoglobin → oxyhaemoglobin

  • Haemoglobin can also bind to carbon dioxide, aiding the transport of carbon dioxide to the lungs

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Naomi Holyoak

Author: Naomi Holyoak

Naomi graduated from the University of Oxford with a degree in Biological Sciences. She has 8 years of classroom experience teaching Key Stage 3 up to A-Level biology, and is currently a tutor and A-Level examiner. Naomi especially enjoys creating resources that enable students to build a solid understanding of subject content, while also connecting their knowledge with biology’s exciting, real-world applications.