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Decompression stop

 

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Decompression stop



 
 
A decompression stop is a period of time a diver
Scuba diving

SCUBA diving is Underwater diving, or taking part in another activity, while using a scuba set. By carrying a source of breathing gas , the scuba diver is able to stay underwater longer than with the simple breath-holding techniques used in snorkeling and free-diving, and is not hindered by air lines to a remote air source....
 must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive to safely eliminate absorbed inert gas
Inert gas

An inert gas is any gas that is not reactive with elements.Like the noble gases an inert gas is not necessarily elemental and are often compound gases....
es from the diver's body to avoid decompression sickness
Decompression sickness

'Decompression sickness' , 'the diver?s disease', 'the bends', 'caisson disease' is the name given to a variety of symptoms suffered by a person exposed to a decrease in the pressure around the body....
. The practice of making decompression stops is called staged decompression, as opposed to continuous decompression.

diver uses decompression tables or dive computer
Dive computer

A dive computer or decompression meter is a device used by a Scuba diving to measure the time and depth of a dive so that a safe ascent rate can be calculated and displayed so that the diver can avoid decompression sickness....
s to find, for his planned dive profile and breathing gas
Breathing gas

Air is the most common and only natural breathing gas. Other artificial gases, either pure gases or mixtures of gases, are used in breathing equipment and enclosed habitats such as Scuba set, surface supplied diving equipment, recompression chambers, submarines, space suits, spacecraft and anaesthetic machines....
, if decompression stops are needed, and if so, the depths and durations of the stops.






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A decompression stop is a period of time a diver
Scuba diving

SCUBA diving is Underwater diving, or taking part in another activity, while using a scuba set. By carrying a source of breathing gas , the scuba diver is able to stay underwater longer than with the simple breath-holding techniques used in snorkeling and free-diving, and is not hindered by air lines to a remote air source....
 must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive to safely eliminate absorbed inert gas
Inert gas

An inert gas is any gas that is not reactive with elements.Like the noble gases an inert gas is not necessarily elemental and are often compound gases....
es from the diver's body to avoid decompression sickness
Decompression sickness

'Decompression sickness' , 'the diver?s disease', 'the bends', 'caisson disease' is the name given to a variety of symptoms suffered by a person exposed to a decrease in the pressure around the body....
. The practice of making decompression stops is called staged decompression, as opposed to continuous decompression.

Doing a stop

Decompression Stop Sample Profile
The diver uses decompression tables or dive computer
Dive computer

A dive computer or decompression meter is a device used by a Scuba diving to measure the time and depth of a dive so that a safe ascent rate can be calculated and displayed so that the diver can avoid decompression sickness....
s to find, for his planned dive profile and breathing gas
Breathing gas

Air is the most common and only natural breathing gas. Other artificial gases, either pure gases or mixtures of gases, are used in breathing equipment and enclosed habitats such as Scuba set, surface supplied diving equipment, recompression chambers, submarines, space suits, spacecraft and anaesthetic machines....
, if decompression stops are needed, and if so, the depths and durations of the stops. A "no stop" dive is a dive that needs no decompression stops during the ascent.

Shorter and shallower decompression dives may only need one single short shallow decompression stop, for example 5 minutes at 3 metres (10 ft). Longer and deeper dives often need a series of decompression stops, each stop being longer but shallower than the previous stop. As a precaution against any unnoticed dive computer malfunction, diver error or physiological
Physiology

Physiology is the study of the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of living organisms. Physiology has traditionally been divided between plant physiology and animal and all living things physiology but the principles of physiology are universal, no matter what particular organism is being studied....
 predisposition to decompression sickness, many divers do an extra "safety stop" in addition to those ordered by their dive computer or tables. A safety stop is typically 1 to 5 minutes at 3 to 6 metres (10 to 20 ft). They are even done during no-stop dives.

In addition to stops, the diver must not exceed a safe ascent rate during the whole of the ascent from depth. Normally the time to ascend the shallowest 20 feet (6 metres) to the surface will take at least 1 minute. Typically with tables, the maximum ascent rate is 30 feet (10 metres) per minute when deeper than 20 feet (6 metres). Some dive computers have variable maximum ascent rates, depending on depth.

Mechanism

During the stop, the "microbubbles" present after every dive leave the diver's body safely through the lung
Lung

The lung is the essential respiration organ in air-breathing animals, including most tetrapods, a few fish and a few snails. In mammals and the more complex life forms, the two lungs are located in the chest on either side of the heart....
s. If they are not given enough time to leave safely or more bubbles are created than can be eliminated naturally, the bubbles grow in size and number causing the symptoms and injuries of decompression sickness.

When diving with nitrogen
Nitrogen

Nitrogen is a chemical element that has the symbol N and atomic number 7 and atomic mass 14.00674?. Elemental nitrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless and mostly inert diatomic gas at standard conditions, constituting 78% by volume of Earth's atmosphere....
 based breathing gas
Breathing gas

Air is the most common and only natural breathing gas. Other artificial gases, either pure gases or mixtures of gases, are used in breathing equipment and enclosed habitats such as Scuba set, surface supplied diving equipment, recompression chambers, submarines, space suits, spacecraft and anaesthetic machines....
es, decompression stops are typically carried out in the 10 to 65 feet (3 to 20 metres) depth range. With helium
Helium

Helium is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, non-toxic, inert monatomic chemical element that heads the noble gas group in the periodic table and whose atomic number is 2....
 based breathing gases, the stop depth is typically between 65 and 130 feet (20 and 40 metres). High partial pressures of oxygen are commonly used in decompression gases to use the effect of the oxygen window.

The length of "surface interval" between dives is also very important for decompression. It typically takes from 16 to 24 hours for the body to return to its normal atmospheric levels of inert gas saturation after a dive. The surface interval can be thought of as the last decompression stop of a dive.

Breathing gas type

Only divers breathing gas
Breathing gas

Air is the most common and only natural breathing gas. Other artificial gases, either pure gases or mixtures of gases, are used in breathing equipment and enclosed habitats such as Scuba set, surface supplied diving equipment, recompression chambers, submarines, space suits, spacecraft and anaesthetic machines....
 at high pressure
Pressure

Pressure is the force per unit area applied to an object in a direction surface normal to the surface. Gauge pressure is the pressure relative to the local atmospheric or ambient pressure....
, such as when using scuba
Scuba set

A scuba set is an independent breathing set that provides a scuba diver with the breathing gas necessary to breathe underwater during scuba diving....
, may need to do decompression stops. A diver who breathes gas at atmospheric pressure, such as in free-diving
Free-diving

Freediving is any of various aquatic activities that share the practice of breath-hold underwater diving. Examples include breathhold spear fishing, freedive photography, apnea competitions and, to a degree, snorkeling....
, snorkeling
Snorkeling

Snorkeling is the practice of swimming on or through a body of water while equipped with a diving mask, a shaped tube called a snorkel, and usually swimfins....
, or when using an atmospheric diving suit
Atmospheric diving suit

An atmospheric diving suit or ADS is a small one-man articulated submersible of anthropomorphic form which resembles a suit of armour, with elaborate pressure joints to allow articulation while maintaining an internal pressure of one atmosphere....
, does not need to do decompression stops. However, it is possible to get taravana
Taravana

Taravana is a disease among Polynesian island natives who habitually free-diving many times in close succession, usually for food or pearls.It seems to be decompression sickness....
 from repetitive deep free-diving
Free-diving

Freediving is any of various aquatic activities that share the practice of breath-hold underwater diving. Examples include breathhold spear fishing, freedive photography, apnea competitions and, to a degree, snorkeling....
 with short surface intervals.

Deep stops

A "Pyle stop" is an additional short deep-water stop, which is increasingly used in deep diving
Deep diving

The meaning of the term deep diving is a form of technical diving. It is defined by the level of the diver's diver training, diving equipment, breathing gas, and surface support:...
 (named after Richard Pyle, an early advocate of deep stops). Typically, a Pyle stop is 2 minutes long and at the depth where the pressure change halves on an ascent from the bottom to a shallow water decompression stop. For example, on an ascent from a maximum depth of 196 feet (60 metres) at 100 psi (7 bar) to a decompression stop at 65 feet (20 metres) at 40 psi (3 bar), the Pyle stop would take place at the halfway pressure, which is 70 psi (5 bar) at 130 feet (40 metres).

Missed stops

A diver missing a decompression stop risks developing decompression sickness. The longer the stops missed, the greater the risk. The usual causes for missing stops are: not having enough breathing gas
Breathing gas

Air is the most common and only natural breathing gas. Other artificial gases, either pure gases or mixtures of gases, are used in breathing equipment and enclosed habitats such as Scuba set, surface supplied diving equipment, recompression chambers, submarines, space suits, spacecraft and anaesthetic machines....
 to complete the stops, or accidentally losing control of buoyancy. An aim of most basic diver training
Diver training

Diver training is the process of developing skills and building experience in the use of diving equipment and techniques so that the diver is able to diving activities safely and have fun....
 is to prevent these two faults. There are less predictable causes of missing decompression stops. Diving suit
Diving suit

A diving suit is a garment or device designed to protect a diver from the underwater environment. Modern diving suits can be divided into two kinds:...
 failure in cold water forces the diver to choose between hypothermia
Hypothermia

Hypothermia is a condition in which an organism's temperature drops below that required for normal metabolism and bodily functions. In warm-blooded animals, core body temperature is maintained near a constant level through biologic homeostasis....
 and decompression sickness
Decompression sickness

'Decompression sickness' , 'the diver?s disease', 'the bends', 'caisson disease' is the name given to a variety of symptoms suffered by a person exposed to a decrease in the pressure around the body....
. Diver injury or marine animal attack may also limit the duration of stops the diver is willing to carry out.

Technical diving
Technical diving

Technical diving is a form of scuba diving that exceeds the scope of recreational diving . Technical divers require advanced training, extensive experience, specialized equipment and often breathe breathing gases other than air or standard nitrox....
 education organizations define special procedures to be done if decompression stops are missed. These procedures may need repeating one or several stops.

Equipment

There are several pieces of safety equipment used to help divers carry out decompression stops. A diving shot
Diving shot

A diving shot is an item of diving equipment consisting of a weight, a line and a buoy....
, a surface marker buoy
Surface Marker Buoy

A Surface Marker Buoy, SMB or simply a blob is an inflatable buoy used by Scuba set diving equipment, with a distance line, to mark the diver's position to their surface, safety boat while the diver is underwater....
 or a decompression buoy can be used to mark the underwater position of the diver and act as a buoyancy control aid in low visibility or currents. A decompression trapeze
Decompression trapeze

A decompression trapeze is a device used in recreational diving and technical diving to make decompression stops more comfortable and more secure and provide the divers' surface cover with a visual reference for the divers' position....
 is useful for comfortably carrying out long stops. A Jonline
Jonline

A Jonline is a short line used by Scuba diving to fasten themselves to something. For example, it is used to fasten a diver to an anchor line during decompression stops in current....
 may be used to fasten a diver to an anchor line or rope during a Decompression stop
Decompression stop

A decompression stop is a period of time a SCUBA diving must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive to safely eliminate absorbed inert gases from the diver's body to avoid decompression sickness....
.

Decompression may be shortened (or accelerated) by breathing an oxygen-rich "deco gas" such as a nitrox with 50% or more oxygen. This decompression gas is carried in side-slung cylinders. Divers need to take great care to avoid breathing oxygen enriched "deco gas" at great depths because of the extremely high risk of oxygen toxicity
Oxygen toxicity

Oxygen toxicity is a condition resulting from the harmful effects of breathing molecular oxygen at elevated partial pressures. It is also known as oxygen toxicity syndrome, oxygen intoxication, hyperoxia, or the Paul Bert effect and Lorrain Smith effect, after the researchers who pioneered its discovery and desc...
. Safety precautions to prevent this happening may include using different coloured regulator housing, flavoured mouthpieces, or simply placing a rubber band vertically across the mouthpiece as an alert.