Phuket Thailand Enriched Air Nitrox Diving
Please click here for
faster navigation:
Dear fellow diver,
Nitrox
is here to stay, but still a hot issue within the diving community.
The debate is continuing among diving professionals and we still
face quite a few misconceptions. We will try to clarify some
of the principles; logistical concerns and concepts here and
hopefully answer the most common questions regarding nitrox
used for recreational diving. Nitrox is nothing new. It has
been used for military, commercial and research diving for more
than thirty years. The only thing new is recreational diving
with nitrox.
Introduction
We started benefiting from
multilevel diving with the introduction of dive computers and
the Wheel. They enabled us to increase our bottom time without
violating safety. Today, Nitrox enables us to safely extend
our bottom time without having to ascend to shallower depths.
Nitrox, also often called
enriched air, is simply air enriched with oxygen. For the purposes
of recreational diving we’ll focus on Nitrox with a 22% to 40%
oxygen contend. The two most popular mixtures contain 32% and
36% oxygen. Also known as EANx32 and EANx36. By replacing some
of the nitrogen in the breathing gas with oxygen, a diver’s
body absorbs less nitrogen for a given depth and dive time.
Oxygen does not contribute to DCI (Decompression Illness) so
a diver breathing Nitrox has longer no-decompression limits
at a given depth compared to a diver breathing air.
The following table illustrates
the benefit:
|
Depth
|
Air NDL
|
EANx 32 NDL
|
EANx 36 NDL
|
|
18 m
|
56 min
|
95 min
|
125 min
|
|
22m
|
37 min
|
60 min
|
70 min
|
|
26m
|
27 min
|
40 min
|
50 min
|
Diving with Nitrox provides longer no-decompression
times compared to diving with air, but its use requires training
to account for considerations not normally associated with recreational
air diving. PADI’s Enriched Air Nitrox Course addresses these
considerations and teaches you how to benefit the most by diving
with Nitrox. In addition the PADI Enriched Air Instructor Course
teaches the Instructor how to successfully organize, plan and
market Nitrox training for recreational divers.
As a certified Nitrox Diver you can rent
Nitrox tanks from our filling station, adding a new dimension
to your diving adventures.
What is Nitrox?
We already have numerous
labels such as "Enriched Air Nitrox", "EANx",
"Safe Air", "Nitrox" and others. Nitrox
in simplest terms is merely a mixture of nitrogen gas and oxygen
gas. Air, therefore, is naturally occurring nitrox for all practical
purposes. In diving, however, "nitrox" usually means
a nitrogen-oxygen mix other than air, normally with more than
21% oxygen.
To avoid confusion over the
various possible nitrox mixes, besides the simple designation
"nitrox", it’s frequently referred to with a number
reflecting oxygen content, such as "Nitrox 36". This
would mean a nitrox mix of 36% oxygen and 64% nitrogen. The
common names, "Nitrox I" or "EANx32" and
"Nitrox II" or "EANx36", refer to 32% and
36% oxygen mixtures, respectively, that the U.S. National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) uses as nitrox standard
mixes, and which are by far the most commonly used mixes in
general.
The Purpose of Nitrox
As every certified diver
knows decompression limits and the potential for decompression
illness are caused by the inert nitrogen component of breathing
air. Nitrogen also causes nitrogen narcosis at deeper depths.
Nitrox was conceived as a way to reduce the nitrogen breathed
during a dive.
By replacing nitrogen in
the breathing gas with oxygen, the diver’s body absorbs less
nitrogen for a given depth and time. Since the body metabolizes
oxygen, in theory oxygen doesn’t contribute to decompression
illness, so a diver breathing EANx32, for example, should have
longer no-decompression limits at a given depth than when breathing
air. If decompression stops become necessary, a shorter decompression
schedule would be required. Alternatively, the diver could base
his decompression schedule as though he was breathing air, with
the reduced nitrogen acting as an extra safety factor. In either
case, nitrogen narcosis should theoretically be reduced somewhat
compared to breathing air at the same depth.
Nitrox is not intended for
extremely deep diving. As we will see, EANx32 becomes unsafe
at depths not much greater than the recreational maximum limit
of 40 meters, with higher oxygen mixes limited to even shallower
maximum depths. Sometimes nitrox becomes confused as a deep
diving gas because commercial and technical divers frequently
use nitrox as a decompression gas following deep dives. However,
these divers don’t begin using nitrox until returning to shallower
depths.
Is it safe?
Since the start more than
thirty years ago, nitrox has been used successfully by closely
supervised and well-trained military, scientific, commercial
and technical divers. Though it hasn’t had as much formal testing
as air, nitrox safety record has been very good. Doppler tests
have been made, with low or no detectable bubble formation when
diving within table limits. In working dives, nitrox isn’t associated
with any higher DCI rate than diving with air. Used properly
there doesn’t appear to be any greater risk diving with nitrox
than diving with air.
Using Nitrox
The key words are "when
used properly". Diving with nitrox provides longer no-decompression
times compared to diving with air, but its use requires training
to account for considerations not associated with recreational
diving with air. The first consideration is that while there
is only one type of air there are potentially 78 mixes of nitrox
with more than 21% oxygen. (Nitrox calculations normally assume
that plus or minus 1% variation is tolerable in a nitrox mix,
so fractions of a percent are not treated as separate mixes.
Nitrox with 31.6%, 32% and 32.3 oxygen are all considered EANx32).
Each of the 78 mixes differs in no-decompression limits and
decompression schedules.
The most common way to handle
this is to convert the actual depth into an Equivalent Air Depth
(EAD) that may be used with air tables. This is accomplished
by using a simple formula. For example, at a depth of 25 meters
using EANx36, the EAD would be 18,4 meters; the diver would
use the no-decompression limits from that depth (rounded to
20 meters). Using the EAD concept, any nitrox mix can be used
with air tables. In the above example, nitrox’s decompression
advantage become immediately noticable: 45 minutes no-decompression
time is available at 25 meters, compared to only 29 minutes
using air, depending upon the air table used. Alternatively,
the diver could plan the dive as an air dive, creating a 16-minute
safety factor.
To simplify nitrox use, nitrox
tables have been developed. NOAA released tables for EANx32
in 1978, and for EANx36 in the early 1980s; these tables are
used exactly like the standard U.S. Navy tables. In fact, these
tables are simply the U.S. Navy tables rewritten with the actual
depth replaced by the calculated EAD. Besides these, other organizations,
such as various navies around the world, have nitrox tables
and finally PADI’s RDP32 and RDP36 where introduced to recreational
divers in 1995/96. In using nitrox tables the diver must be
sure that he uses the appropriate table for the particular mix
he will be breathing.
Oxygen Toxicity
Unfortunately, nitrox’s nitrogen
advantages are gained only at the price of oxygen disadvantages.
When using nitrox, exposure to dangerously high oxygen partial
pressures becomes possible at depths far shallower than with
air. Nitrox mixtures with more than 32% oxygen cannot even be
taken to the 40-meter depth limit for recreational diving.
The problem is Central Nervous
System (CNS) oxygen toxicity, which, depending upon exposure
duration, becomes a potential risk when oxygen partial pressures
exceed critical limits. A case of CNS oxygen toxicity causes
the diver to convulse and lose consciousness, and may or may
not be proceeded by warning symptoms. Convulsions are not dangerous
themselves, but an unconscious diver will lose his regulator
and drown.
Critical oxygen limits vary
drastically with partial pressure. A diver can tolerate .6 Ata
oxygen partial pressure for up to twelve hours without significant
risk of CNS symptoms. At 1.6 Ata, which is the maximum acceptable
p.p., the time is about 45 minutes, possibly shorter than the
no-decompression limit of the equivalent air depth. The nitrox
diver monitors his p.p./time allowances to make certain he doesn’t
exceed his "oxygen clock", in much the same way he
watches no-decompression limits. Minimum surface intervals must
be noted as well.
As the oxygen percentage
in nitrox increases, the depth at which the critical 1.6 limit
is reached rises. When breathing air the diver reaches 1.6 Ata
at 66.5 meters. Breathing EANx32 1.6 Ata is reached at 40.3
meters; and with EANx36, 34,6 meters. Below these depths, the
risk of CNS oxygen toxicity goes up dramatically.
Equipment Considerations
With the increase in technical
diving and nitrox use, there have been quite a few conflicting
reports about whether standard scuba equipment is compatible
with nitrox.
NOAA’s policies since the
70s have been:
- Standard air equipment, except the tank, may be used with
any nitrox mix, which has 40% or less oxygen without any
modification.
- Equipment being used with mixes with more than 40 % oxygen,
OR used for oxygen mixing must be oxygen compatible.
This means that for nitrox
mixes with 40 % or less oxygen, which are the most common mixes,
a nitrox diver can use the same equipment that he uses for air
diving. The tank is an exception to the 40 % guideline, and
needs to be oxygen compatible regardless of oxygen content in
the nitrox. The reason the tank must be oxygen compatible is
that a common method for mixing nitrox is partial pressure mixing.
This is done by adding 100 % oxygen to the cylinder, then topping
of with air that’s filtered to oxygen compatible standards.
Even if the final mix may be less than 40 % oxygen, exposure
to 100 % oxygen during mixing requires oxygen compatibility.
Besides oxygen compatibility, nitrox tanks should be clearly
marked to avoid confusion with air tanks. This is important
considering that using a mix with more than 32 % oxygen, a diver
can exceed the maximum oxygen depth limit while within the traditional
40-meter recreational depth limit.
Nitrox also requires at least
one specialized piece of equipment: the oxygen analyzer. While
the nitrox diver doesn’t need to own one, the diver must confirm
the mix’s oxygen content personally after the tank has been
filled. This safety procedure ensures use of the correct EADs
and calculation of oxygen p.p.
Mixing Nitrox
Mixing nitrox isn’t as simple
as pumping compressed air. In fact, while the air in a typical
dive store meets the standards for compressed air diving, it
frequently does not meet the higher standards required for mixing
nitrox. This means that even an oxygen compatible cylinder with
oxygen already in it cannot simply be topped off with air from
a typical dive store compressed air system. Doing so actually
creates a risk of fire or explosion. To avoid these complications,
nitrox diver training emphasizes these points; the nitrox diver
learns that the typical dive store isn’t capable of providing
nitrox (yet). Specialized dive stores and operations have and
use appropriate nitrox mixing equipment. The point is that safe
nitrox mixing requires special equipment, and like nitrox diving,
requires special training.
Conclusion
Used properly, there appears
to be no greater safety concern with diving with nitrox than
with diving with air. Used improperly, nitrox poses oxygen toxicity
risks more readily than air.
Nitrox diving requires special
training in table use, oxygen limits, equipment compatibility
and oxygen analyzer use.
Dive operations interested
in mixing nitrox must be prepared t o invest in the training and required
training to do so safely.
To learn more about Nitrox
Diving Courses with IDC Phuket, please utilize our inquiry form.

|