Answer: To prevent Absorptive Atelectasisabsorptive atelectasis (Hunter Lunglung) due to breathing pure oxygen long term.
Not the reasons below (as suggested by previous answers):
Oxygen toxicity (correlates with O2 partial pressure, not O2 concentration)
Decompression sickness (made worse by nitrogen, not better)
Oxygen toxicity (correlates with O2 partial pressure, not O2 concentration)Thermal convection (No thermal convection in microgravity)
Decompression sickness (made worse by nitrogen, not better)Air cycling ?
Air cycling ?Astronaut overheating ?
Astronaut overheating ?Biology experiments ?
Biology experiments ?Human outgassing (Farts are up to 90% swallowed nitrogen)
Human outgassing (Farts are up to 90% swallowed nitrogen)
In the early 1950s, in UK aviation medicine, the condition of atelectasis (lung tissue collapse) was given the name "Hunter lung" due to its prevalence in pilots of the transonic fighter jet, the Hawker Hunter, which used a 100% oxygen supply.
Atelectasis also develops in 75–90% of people undergoing general anesthesia for a surgical procedure. (Atelectasis is due to the high concentration of oxygen in the anesthetic gas mix.)
— https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atelectasis.
The cause of absorptive atelectasis isabsorptive atelectasis is (a usually temporary) blockage of small airways by secretions. If the alveoli is filled with pure oxygen, the oxygen peripheral to the blockage is absorbed and that section of lung collapses. Surface tension acts to prevent re-expansion of those air sacs once the blockage is cleared. The longer high concentration of oxygen is breathed, the larger portion of the lung tissue suffers atelectasis. Hours (EVA) or days (Apollo) of pure oxygen are tolerated, but weeks or months (Skylab, ISS) would be problematic.
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