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DIEnriched air nitrox reduces the nitrogen fraction in the gas you breathe. For example, EAN32 contains about 68 percent nitrogen compared with about 79 percent in air.
Most divers are taught that the benefit of nitrox is longer no stop limits and shorter surface intervals. That is true in planning terms and working dives. But the primary physiological safety benefit appears when depth and time stay the same as they would have been on air.
At the same depth, a lower nitrogen fraction means a lower nitrogen partial pressure. Because nitrogen uptake depends on partial pressure and time, less nitrogen dissolves into your tissues per minute at that depth.
If you use nitrox and extend your dive to the longer no stop limit allowed by that mix, total nitrogen uptake still increases with time. In many common recreational square profiles, diving nitrox to its longer limit can produce similar predicted decompression load in your dive computer compared with diving air to its own limit. The lower nitrogen fraction is partly offset by the longer exposure.
The clearest physiological benefit appears when you dive a similar depth and time to what you would have done on air (respecting MOD). In that case, lower inspired nitrogen leads to lower tissue nitrogen loading and lower predicted decompression stress in most algorithms.
There is also a recognised effect often called the oxygen window. Your body continuously uses oxygen in tissues. This lowers local oxygen partial pressure, which slightly reduces overall gas pressure inside tissues and supports nitrogen elimination. Breathing a higher oxygen fraction increases this difference, which can support inert gas washout. The effect is most relevant when nitrox is used conservatively rather than to extend limits. Respect your maximum operating depths to reduce risk of central nervous system O2 toxicity!
Nitrox changes gas fractions. It does not remove risk. Its primary physiological benefit is reduced nitrogen loading at a given depth and time, not pushing bottom time limits.
@diving.dr.anika










