Rebreather Fundamentals
By Kevin Gurr for Ouroboros rebreather website
It has become increasing
apparent in recent years that there is a lot of mis-information
with regard to the fundamental principles which govern
safe rebreather operations. This is partly due to
a lack of precise information from manufacturers and
partly due to mis-use and abuse by divers in general.
Fundamentals
In order to understand what makes a safe rebreather,
firstly one must understand the fundamental properties
that govern a rebreather design. This can be divided
into 4 areas.
1. The resistive work of breathing
(WOB) within the rebreather
2. The hydrostatic WOB of the unit when submerged
3. The absorbent duration
4. The oxygen control dynamics
Looking at each in turn.
The Resistive Work of Breathing
This is purely a result of the gas flow restrictions
within the unit. In other words how much the size
of the pipes and orifices generate a resistance to
breathing. Such things as small mouthpiece mushroom
valves, small hoses, counter lungs with insufficient
volume or room to expand and long absorbent paths
within a canister are common elements which go to
make up a resistive breathing circuit.
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Resistive WOB is also
a function of gas density and hence depth. The deeper the
dive and the higher the gas density the greater the WOB.
WOB is also a function of ventilation or breathing rate.
The more gas flow (higher breathing rate) the more resistances
is generated. A rebreather that breaths OK on the surface
may well not at 40m on an air diluent. This why current
European Standards (EN) Central European test standards)
and military test standards insist on a resistive WOB measurement
at depth and with different ventilation rates and in at
least two orientations (swimming positions).
WOB is also subdivided into two areas of
concern. The first is a short-term effect (breath by breath)
and the second long term (over a dive). The rebreathers
pressure/volume (PV) diagram is normally like a sideways
ellipse, as you breathe out it starts from the bottom left
and moves to the top right. The reverse is true on inhale.
If the ellipse is thin (narrow in the middle) then the energy
(joules/liter) consumed within the breathing cycle may be
small and the long term energy expended also small, however
the higher the angle of the ellipse from horizontal and
there will be a restrictive feeling at the end each breath.
This can produce much laboured breathing and a poor short
term ‘feel’ to the rebreather. This is a function
of the unit’s design in a specific area.
The Hydrostatic WOB
This is the result of the resistive WOB and the effects
of the position of the counter lungs about the body when
the rebreather and diver are submerged in water. For example,
a back mounted counter lung rebreather may have a good resistive
WOB but when in a horizontal (face down) swimming position
the distance, hence pressure difference between the counter
lungs and the lung centroid, may when combined with the
resistive WOB create an excessive pressure which the diver
has to suck against in order to take a breath. In this case
the inhale pressure would be excessive (because the diver
is inhaling gas from a lower pressure) and the exhale would
be easy having breathed out into a lower pressure.
Chest mounted counter lungs have the reverse
affect in the same swim position.
It would seem a perfect solution is an
over-shoulder counter lung upon which any hydrostatic effects
have little result. However if a rebreather has a poor resistive
WOB anyway, the combination of this and any minimal hydrostatic
WOB can still mean the unit has a highly restive breathing
circuit and hence have a laboured breathing ‘feel’.
In summary a rebreathers WOB can only be
quantified under a range of hydrostatic (rotating) positions
with additional measurements at depth. Furthermore, assessing
a unit under a range of surface conditions at undefined
ventilation rates is inadequate as it is only under stressful
conditions (and normally at depth) that we generate high
work-rates and this is precisely when the rebreather needs
to have a low WOB.
Absorbent duration
This is a greatly misunderstood area. Many manufacturers
quote durations based on simple surface trials which is
insufficient and potential dangerous. Absorbent life is
primarily affected by the following;
1. Amount (Kg or Lbs) of material
2. Type of absorbent material, its granule size and shape
(which in turn affects the WOB) and its grade or usage type.
3. Water temperature
4. The absorbent canisters ability to insulate against the
water temperature
5. The amount of CO2 generated by the diver
6. The gas density/depth
7. The style and design of canister
The standard CE test for a canister is
done at 40m with oxygen in nitrogen gas mixtures and at
100m with a helium based gas as diluents, in 4 degrees centigrade
water temperature at a CO2 generation rate of 1.6 l/min
and a ventilation rate of 40l/min. Some navies test canister
at around 18m and with as low as 0.5l/min CO2 generation.
The CO2 breakthrough figure is referenced to 5mb.
The range of depths, gas densities, CO2
rates and water temperatures used in each case can, dependant
on the canister design, give markedly different durations.
What is certain from the data available is that canister
durations measured at the surface are dangerously inaccurate
for predicting overall dive durations. It can be easily
shown that for most axial and even radial canisters the
efficiency of the canister decreases significantly with
depth. One canister measured went from 77% efficient in
15m to 49% efficient in 40m. The 15m duration was 3 hours
while the 40m duration was 1 hour and 50 minutes.
The ‘saving grace’ of currently
available designs is that most people cannot maintain rates
of 1.6 l/min CO2 or seldom dive in 4-degree water. However
data suggests that as a method of specifying canister duration,
a single hourly rate independent of primarily depth and
gas density, is insufficient and a range of diving parameter
curves may be better employed to specify a unit’s
duration. In other words in order to assess a rebreather’s
suitability for one type of diving over another, it would
seem appropriate to test a unit at a range of depths with
at least air and trimix as gases. To provide a safety margin
water temperature and CO2 generation rate should remain
constant.
Oxygen control system
This can be a mechanical or an electronically controlled
device. Which ever is chosen it is important that the control
of the oxygen level is maintained within certain limits.
If decompression is to be conducted using tables or a fixed
PO2 dive computer, the limits must be accurately maintained.
Rapid excursions to and from depth must also not generate
excessively low or high PO2’s. Ideally any such limits
reached should generate an alarm, as it cannot be relied
upon that the diver will notice especially in a multi-tasking
situation. Some rebreather designs, due to high flow rates
within the oxygen circuit, can generate massive PO2 spikes
sufficient to cause convulsions in a short space of time
if left unchecked, this is an undesirable design feature
should an addition valve fail. Within the CE and most Navy
tests is a PO2 tracking control test as well as an upper
and lower limit test after rapid depth changes. With units
employing a constant minimum feed of oxygen, which is supplemented
by the diver, this minimum should not generate the upper
and lower test limits specified.
Myths
In addition to and as a result of the above there is the
issue of ‘diver abuse’, in particular with canister
duration rules. This mainly occurs because of a lack of
understanding and information. Common myths seem to be;
1. ‘If I use all my canister duration
I can just scrape the top off the absorbent and add a bit
and get more time’.
2. ‘When I have used up all the time on the absorbent
I can just dry it out and use it again’.
3. ‘As long as I fill a canister and seal it I can
use the absorbent anytime in the future’.
4. ‘If I partly use a canister I can seal it and use
the rest at anytime and get the same duration’.
5. ‘If I fully use a canister I can leave it 24 hours
to recover and then get more time’.
6. ‘I can use my canister at any depth and get the
same duration’.
7. ‘I can use my rebreather with any gas and get the
same duration’.
8. ‘I can use my canister in any water temperature
and get the same duration’.
9. ‘If I run out of absorbent time underwater I will
get a small headache and have time to deal with it’.
All of these assumptions
have problems in varying degrees of severity. The bottom
line is that while the sport of rebreather diving is increasing,
unless the education curve follows it, there will be more
incidents, most of them avoidable and some of them lethal.

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