GC, you really need read things more carefully, you've misread a little bit of info here, and then proceeded to base an entire argument off of the misread info.
It wasn't much relevant to my general argument, which is why I let it pass. My general argument was that diffusion happens between and within substances into which the gasses are dissolved, which is why you can breathe in a cavern even if it has no non-submerged entrance to the surface. The oxygen dissolved into the water diffuses between the water and the nitrogen in the air, the C02 in the cavern air also dissolves into the water at the same time.
It seems now however that oxygen and C02 are suspended in the nitrogen rather than dissolved. They will still diffuse within the nitrogen however, because this runs in parallel to the tendency of heavier gasses to sink it would seem that a more horizontal ventilation shaft would actually work better than a vertical one.
I'm sorry GC, but you need to actually do some research before spouting blatant falsehoods:
Gas | | Formula | | Molecular Weight | | Density |
Nitrogen | | N2 | | 28.02 | | 1.165 |
Air | | | | 29 | | 1.205 |
Oxygen | | O2 | | 32 | | 1.331 |
Carbon dioxide | | CO2 | | 44.01 | | 1.8421 |
We see N2 is the lightest and CO2 is the heaviest; though obviously not problematically so (since we can breathe.)
(There's also the fact that most of the atmospheric CO2 dissolves into the ocean so it can kill coral reefs, like good CO2 should, but that doesn't help our room.)
You don't seem to have considered that I know that the weight of a substance is not just it's molecular mass. It is also it's overall density, if you heat air up it rises above the colder air but this is not because the molecules have got any heavier.
There isn't much C02 in the atmosphere compared to everything else, mostly nitrogen. If the larger body of air goes in a certain direction, it carries with it the individual molecules that are part of it. That means that if we heat up the air so it goes out of the chimney, it will carry the CO2 with it; if the flow of air is strong enough. What do we have to worry about it what happens if the air cools down before leaving the chimney, then the C02 will sink freely and we are stuck with the stuff, which one more reason to prohibit individual smokers; we want a strong flow of smoke out of the fortress and not a lot of small puffs of smoke floating aroud.
Or it might be that the difference in weight between the C02 and the nitrogen is too small to cancel out the diffusion in the opposite direction. The C02 will always leave, but it just might not leave fast enough to counteract the speed at which we are making more of it.
Then we went on about if adding a second shaft was sufficient to offset CO2 conversion, and if a greater difference diffused faster. I reiterated that we knew they were "similarly dense" when countering the "faster diffusion" point.
I never brought up Nitrogen, so you really should have checked the density of that before claiming anything.
I said nitrogen is heavier than oxygen and CO2 because when I googled it, it said it was so; if this is not due to it's greater molecular weight then it must be due to it's density; google seems to be wrong and so I am wrong also; Google also told me that the weight of oxygen does not matter much because it dissolved into nitrogen. That makes sense also, because less dense substances dissolve into denser substances, if nitrogen is much heavier than oxygen but does not have greater molecular mass that means it has to be denser and the lighter it's molecules are the denser it is going to have to be to be heavier than oxygen.
Google is wrong!
GC, would you please cite where you get your information from?
Google and other people on the thread. I admit I am very much out of my intellectual depth here but I have learned not to trust google; a useful life lesson I am sure. If you intend to seldom be wrong, believing what google says is not the way to go about it.