Underwater life support based on immobilized oxygen carriers

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Abstract

One of the primary problems that hinders humans in their efforts to explore and develop the ocean realms is the lack of a ready supply of oxygen. Practical methods have not yet been devised for using the vast amount of oxygen dissolved in ocean waters for human life support in an undersea environment. Fish and other water-breathing animals have solved this problem by utilizing hemoglobin as a molecular oxygen pump. To achieve a similar oxygen extraction capability, we have explored various methods of oxygen extraction that are based on immobilized forms of hemoglobin. Improved methods for immobilizing hemoglobin or other oxygen carrying molecules and a method for extracting the available dissolved oxygen from natural waters and other fluids are described. The techniques that have been developed allow for immobilization of oxygen carriers at high concentration in a state where they are capable of reversible oxygen binding, and also allow for regeneration of the carrier in the event of oxidation of the oxygen-binding site. © 1984 Humana Press Inc.

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Bonaventura, C., Bonaventura, J., Hooper, I. R., & Marshall, T. (1984). Underwater life support based on immobilized oxygen carriers. Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology, 9(1), 65–80. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02798375

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