Key points
- The gas exchange system is responsible for getting oxygen into the blood and removing carbon dioxide as a person breathes.
- Breathing is also called 'ventilation' and is the movement of gases into and out from the lungs.
- Exercise, smoking and asthma are all factors that can affect the gas exchange system.
Video - How does breathing work?
Can you answer these questions based on the video?
1. What is the scientific name for breathing?
2. How can someone help their gas exchange system be more efficient?
Ventilation
By leading an active and healthy lifestyle including regular exercise.
The gas exchange system
The process of breathing is called ventilation. Breathing in is called inhaling, and breathing out is exhaling.
When you inhale, your diaphragm muscle contracts and moves downwards, and the intercostal muscles contract and move the ribs upwards and outwards. This increases the volume of the lungs, which reduces the pressure inside and so air moves into the lungs to equalise it. Air that is rich in oxygen moves into the gas exchange system and then the body when you breathe in.
When you exhale, our diaphragm muscle relaxes and moves upwards, and the intercostal muscles relax and move downwards and inwards. This reduces the volume of the lungs, which forces air outwards. Air with more carbon dioxide is then removed when you breathe out.
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The gas exchange system is made from key parts, each of which has a different function.
Part of the gas exchange system | Function |
---|---|
Trachea | This is also called the windpipe. This tube runs from the mouth, down the throat towards the lungs. It is lined with rings of cartilageA tough, flexible material found in the nose and ears, but also between bones in your spine, knees and around your trachea. which keep it open at all times. |
Bronchus | The trachea splits into a left and right bronchus (plural: bronchi), each leads to a lung. |
Bronchiole | Each bronchus splits again and again into thousands of smaller tubes called bronchioles which take the air deeper into the lungs. |
Alveoli | At the ends of bronchioles are tiny air sacs called alveoli. Here oxygen moves into the blood and carbon dioxide moves out. |
Intercostal muscles | These muscles run between the ribs and form the chest wall. They contract and relax with the diaphragm when a person breathes. |
Diaphragm | The diaphragm is a dome-shaped, flat sheet of muscle under the lungs. It contracts and relaxes with the intercostal muscles during breathing. |
The alveoli in detail
Alveoli are the tiny air sacs found at the end of bronchioles in your lungs. Gas exchange occurs here. Oxygen moves into the blood and carbon dioxide is removed. This oxygen is needed for respiration to release energy from glucose which has been obtained from food. Carbon dioxide is a waste product in this process and must be removed.
Some water vapour is also lost from the surface of the alveoli into the lungs - we can see this condensing when we breathe out on cold days.
Alveoli have the following key features to maximise gas exchange:
- A huge combined surface area
- Moist, thin walls to maximise diffusionThe overall movement of particles of gas or liquid from an area of higher to lower concentration.
- Millions of tiny blood vessels called capillaries just behind these walls.
Did you know?
An adult has around 600 million alveoli in their lungs with a combined surface area the size of a tennis court.
Exercise, asthma and smoking
Regular exercise strengthens the intercostal muscles and diaphragm which make breathing more efficient.
Asthma is a medical condition in which the lining of the airways from the mouth to the lungs become irritated and swell up. This reduces the air that can move in and out from the lungs. It is often treated by inhaling medication from an inhaler.
Smoking damages the tiny hairs that line the gas exchange system; these hairs are called ciliated cells. These move mucus up that has trapped dust and pathogens out of the airways. This can result in smokers developing a cough to remove this mucus. Smoking also irritates the bronchi which can lead to bronchitis. Smoking also breaks down the lining of the alveoli, which means less gas exchange can occur and can lead to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Cigarette smoke also contains carcinogen chemicals like tar, which can cause mouth, throat and lung cancer.
Test your knowledge
Quiz - The process of breathing
Test questions
Write a paragraph to answer the following question. Tap 'Show answer' to see seven points you could have included.
Describe the process of ventilation.
Inhaling in breathing in and exhaling is breathing out.
When inhaling, the diaphragm muscle contacts and moves downwards.
The intercostal muscles contract and move the ribs upwards and outwards.
This increases the volume of the lungs, which reduces the pressure and so air moves into the lungs to equalise it.
When exhaling, the diaphragm muscle relaxes and moves upwards.
The intercostal muscles relax and move downwards and inwards.
This reduces the volume of the lungs, which forces air outwards.
Teaching resources
Need some extra resources to support your biology lessons? In this short film from 91热爆 series Inside The Human Body viewers get a closer look at the process of breathing.
91热爆 Teach has thousands of free, curriculum-linked resources to help deliver lessons - all arranged by subject and age group.
Play the Atomic Labs game! gamePlay the Atomic Labs game!
Try out practical experiments in this KS3 science game.
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