Carbon Dioxide in Breath
Materials: ★★☆ Available in most school laboratories or specialist stores
Difficulty: ★★☆ Can be done by science teachers
Safety: ★★☆ Some safety precautions required to perform safely
Categories: Body Systems, Respiration and Photosynthesis, Sports Science
Alternative titles: Comparing Carbon Dioxide in Inhaled and Exhaled Air
Summary
This experiment compares the carbon dioxide content of inhaled and exhaled air by passing a person’s breath through tubes into test solutions. Limewater is used to detect carbon dioxide, showing the difference between inhaled and exhaled air.
Procedure
- Set up two boiling tubes, each containing an equal amount of limewater.
- Insert a delivery tube into each boiling tube so the ends dip below the liquid surface.
- Connect both tubes to a T-piece mouthpiece so one tube is for inhaling and the other for exhaling.
- Check that all bungs are secure and the delivery tubes are at the same depth in the liquid.
- Breathe in gently through the apparatus, drawing air through one tube.
- Without removing the mouthpiece, breathe out through the other tube, bubbling air through the second liquid.
- Repeat inhaling and exhaling so that equal amounts of air pass through each liquid.
- Observe and record color or turbidity changes in the two tubes.
Links
Carbon dioxide content of inhaled and exhaled air - Caroline Osborne:
To Investigate the Carbon Dioxide Levels of Inhaled and Exhaled Air - Limewater Test - Simple Science and Maths:
📄 Experiments to compare carbon dioxide content of inhaled and exhaled air - Bio Topics: https://www.biotopics.co.uk/humans/inhaledexhaled.html
Variations
- Collect exhaled air in a bag and pass it into the liquid instead of breathing directly.
- Compare results for resting breathing versus after exercise.
Safety Precautions
- Do not inhale directly from containers with chemicals—only breathe through the mouthpiece setup.
- Use fresh, clean mouthpieces for each participant to avoid sharing germs.
- Limewater (calcium hydroxide solution) can irritate skin and eyes—handle carefully and wash spills immediately.
Questions to Consider
- What changes are observed in limewater with exhaled air? (It turns cloudy, showing CO2 is present.)
- Why must the same volume of air pass through each tube? (For a fair comparison of CO2 levels in inhaled vs. exhaled air.)
- What is the approximate CO2 content of inhaled vs. exhaled air? (Inhaled air ~0.04%, exhaled air ~4%.)
- How does this experiment demonstrate the role of respiration in humans? (It shows oxygen is taken in and carbon dioxide is released during breathing.)