Practice Flashcards
What is a gas-exchange surface?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 2.6
Below are all 73 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
2.6.112 cards
What is a gas-exchange surface?
The thin boundary where gases pass between the body and the environment — e.g. the wall of an **alveolus** in the lung.
By what process do gases cross a gas-exchange surface?
**Diffusion** — the passive net movement of particles from **high** to **low** concentration.
Why is no energy needed for gas exchange?
Diffusion is **passive**: particles move on their own down the **concentration gradient**, so no energy (ATP) is used.
Name the four features of a good gas-exchange surface.
**Large** surface area, **thin** (short diffusion distance), **moist** and **permeable**.
Why does a large surface area help gas exchange?
More gas can diffuse across **at the same time**, so exchange is faster.
Why does a thin surface help gas exchange?
The wall is only **one cell thick**, giving a **short diffusion distance**, so diffusion is fast.
Why is the gas-exchange surface moist?
A thin film of water lets the gases **dissolve** before they cross the membrane.
In which direction does oxygen diffuse in the lungs?
From the **alveolar air into the blood** (from higher to lower oxygen concentration).
In which direction does carbon dioxide diffuse in the lungs?
From the **blood into the alveolar air** (from higher to lower carbon dioxide concentration).
How does ventilation help maintain the gradient?
Fresh air keeps alveolar **oxygen high** and **carbon dioxide low**, so the gradient stays steep.
How does blood flow help maintain the gradient?
It carries blood away and brings fresh blood in, keeping capillary **oxygen low** and **carbon dioxide high**.
What happens to diffusion if the concentrations on both sides become equal?
Net diffusion **stops** — which is why the gradient must be kept **steep** by ventilation and blood flow.
2.6.212 cards
What is an alveolus?
A tiny **air sac** in the lung where **gas exchange** between air and blood takes place.
Which two gases are exchanged at an alveolus, and in which direction?
**Oxygen** diffuses from the air into the blood; **carbon dioxide** diffuses from the blood into the air.
List the adaptations of an alveolus for gas exchange.
**Large surface area**, wall **one cell thick** (short diffusion distance), **moist lining**, and a **rich blood supply**.
Why are there millions of tiny alveoli rather than one large sac?
Many tiny sacs pack a **huge total surface area** into the chest, and surface area controls how fast gases diffuse.
What is the function of a type I pneumocyte?
It is a **thin, flat cell** forming most of the alveolar wall, giving a **short diffusion distance** — it is the gas-exchange surface.
What is the function of a type II pneumocyte?
It **secretes surfactant** onto the moist alveolar lining.
What is the function of a phagocyte in the alveolus?
It **engulfs and digests** pathogens, dust and debris that are breathed in, keeping the surface clean.
What is surfactant?
A fluid secreted by type II pneumocytes that **lowers the surface tension** of the moist alveolar lining.
What is the role of surfactant? (2 marks)
It **lowers surface tension**, so alveoli **do not collapse** on exhalation and the lungs are **easier to inflate**.
Why does a thin alveolar wall help gas exchange?
A wall **one cell thick** gives a **short diffusion distance**, so gases cross the wall quickly.
Why does a rich capillary network help gas exchange?
It keeps a **steep concentration gradient** by carrying gases away, so diffusion stays fast.
Predict the consequence of destroying the type II pneumocytes.
**No surfactant** is made → surface tension stays high → **alveoli collapse** → reduced gas exchange.
2.6.313 cards
What is ventilation?
The movement of **air into and out of the lungs** (breathing) — it keeps fresh air at the gas-exchange surface.
Do the lungs have their own muscle to pull air in?
**No** — lungs have no muscle. The **diaphragm** and **intercostal muscles** change the chest's volume to move air.
What is the diaphragm and what does it do when it contracts?
A sheet of muscle below the lungs. When it **contracts** it **flattens and moves down**, increasing the volume of the thorax.
Where are the intercostal muscles, and what do the external ones do during inhalation?
Between the ribs. The **external intercostals contract** to pull the ribs **up and out**.
Give the cause-effect chain for breathing.
**Muscles → volume → pressure → air flow.** Muscles change the volume, which changes the pressure, and air moves down the pressure gradient.
During inhalation, what happens to thoracic volume and pressure?
Volume **increases**, so pressure **falls below atmospheric** — and air flows **in**.
During exhalation, what happens to thoracic volume and pressure?
Volume **decreases**, so pressure **rises above atmospheric** — and air flows **out**.
Why does air flow into the lungs during inhalation?
Because the pressure inside has **fallen below atmospheric**, and air always moves from **high to low** pressure.
Is resting exhalation active or passive?
**Passive** — the muscles simply **relax** (no contraction needed); the diaphragm domes up and the ribs drop.
What causes the thorax to expand during inspiration?
The **diaphragm and external intercostal muscles contracting**.
Name a muscle group besides the diaphragm that contracts to cause inspiration.
The **external intercostal muscles**.
On a lung-pressure trace, how do you spot inhalation versus exhalation?
Pressure **below** atmospheric = **inhaling** (volume rising); pressure **above** atmospheric = **exhaling** (volume falling).
How do volume and pressure change relative to each other?
In **opposite** directions — bigger volume means lower pressure, smaller volume means higher pressure.
2.6.412 cards
What is a spirometer?
An instrument that **measures the air a person breathes in and out**, recording it as a **trace** of lung volume against time.
Define tidal volume (TV).
The volume of air in **one normal, resting breath** — the height of one small wave on the trace.
Define vital capacity (VC).
The **largest volume of air moved in one breath**: IRV + TV + ERV (deepest breath in to fullest breath out).
Define residual volume (RV).
Air that **always stays in the lungs** and cannot be breathed out — so it never appears on the trace.
How do you read vital capacity off a trace?
Measure the volume from the **top of the deepest breath in** to the **bottom of the fullest breath out**.
How do you find the ventilation rate from a trace?
**Count the complete waves (breaths) in one minute.**
What is the function of the one-way valves in a spirometer?
They keep **inhaled and exhaled air on separate tubes** so the two airstreams do not mix.
What does the soda lime do in a spirometer?
It **absorbs the carbon dioxide breathed out**, so the person re-breathes air without a CO₂ build-up.
Why does the resting baseline slope downward over time?
**Oxygen is used up in respiration** and the **CO₂ is absorbed by the soda lime (not replaced)**, so the total gas in the closed circuit falls.
During inspiration, does the spirometer pen rise or fall?
It **rises** — air is drawn out of the chamber, the drum sinks and the pen goes up.
How does the trace change during exercise?
The waves become **taller (larger tidal volume)** and **closer together (faster rate)**, raising the air inhaled per minute.
How does total lung capacity relate to vital capacity?
**Total lung capacity = vital capacity + residual volume** — the residual volume can never be breathed out.
2.6.512 cards
What is emphysema?
A lung disease in which the **walls between alveoli are destroyed**, so the sacs merge into **fewer, larger** spaces with a much smaller surface area for gas exchange.
What is the DIRECT effect of alveolar destruction in emphysema?
A **reduced surface area** for gas exchange.
Why does emphysema slow oxygen uptake into the blood?
Less surface area (and a longer / damaged diffusion path) means oxygen diffuses into the blood **more slowly**.
What is elastic recoil, and what happens to it in emphysema?
Elastic recoil lets the lung spring back to push air out. In emphysema it is **lost**, so air is **trapped** and exhaling is hard.
Name the TWO ways emphysema impairs gas exchange.
It **reduces the surface area** (fewer, larger sacs) AND it **loses elastic recoil** (air is trapped).
How does emphysema affect a person during exercise?
They cannot raise oxygen uptake enough to meet demand, so they become **breathless**, tire quickly and have **limited exercise** capacity.
What is the main cause of emphysema?
**Smoking** (cigarette smoke); **air pollution** also contributes.
What national change would most reduce emphysema incidence?
**Reducing smoking** (anti-smoking laws, stop-smoking support) and **cutting air pollution**.
Why is a large surface area important for gas exchange?
A larger surface area lets **more oxygen diffuse per breath** — emphysema reduces it, so gas exchange slows.
In emphysema, do the alveoli become smaller or larger?
**Larger** — small sacs merge into fewer, larger spaces (so there is less surface area).
Define alveolus.
A tiny **air sac** in the lung where gas exchange occurs; its wall is one cell thick, and millions give a large surface area.
Memory hook for emphysema?
'**Fewer, bigger, slower**' — fewer, bigger air sacs make gas exchange slower.
2.6.612 cards
What is a stoma?
A small **pore** in the leaf surface (mostly the underside) through which **gases enter and leave** the leaf.
What do guard cells do?
The two cells either side of a stoma that change shape to **open or close the pore**, controlling gas exchange and water loss.
On which leaf surface are most stomata found?
The **lower (under) surface** — this reduces water loss while still allowing gas exchange.
What is the palisade mesophyll, and what does it do?
A layer of **tall cells packed with chloroplasts** near the upper surface; it carries out **most of the photosynthesis**.
What is the spongy mesophyll, and what do its air spaces do?
A layer of **loosely-packed cells with large air spaces**; the spaces let **gases diffuse** to and from every cell.
Why is a leaf thin and flat?
**Thin** = short diffusion distance for gases; **flat and wide** = large surface area for light and gas exchange.
By what process do gases move in and out of a leaf?
**Diffusion** — from a higher to a lower concentration, with no energy needed.
Trace the path of CO₂ from the air into a chloroplast.
In through a **stoma** → through the **spongy-mesophyll air spaces** → across the **cell wall and membrane** → into a **chloroplast**.
What does the waxy cuticle do?
It is a **transparent, waterproof** coating that **reduces water loss** while still letting light through.
What gases enter and leave during photosynthesis in a leaf?
**CO₂ diffuses in**; **O₂ (and water vapour) diffuse out** — through the stomata.
Why does the spongy mesophyll have air spaces?
So **CO₂ can reach every cell** and **O₂ can diffuse away** — they are the leaf's internal corridors for gases.
What is the upper epidermis like, and why?
A single layer of **transparent, tightly-packed cells with no chloroplasts**, so **light passes through** to the palisade cells below.
Topic 2.6 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Gas exchange
Biology exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free