Respuesta :
The answer is 1.34 millilitres oxygen.
You have 15 g of haemoglobin in every 100. ml of your blood.
10.0 ml of your blood can carry 2.01 ml of oxygen. 1.34 millilitres of oxygen does each gram of haemoglobin carry.
[tex]\frac{100}{10} \times 2.01=20.1 \mathrm{ml}$ 0xygen[/tex]
15 gr haemoglobin =100 ml blood = 20.1 ml Oxygen, so for each gram of haemoglobin:
[tex]$\frac{1 \mathrm{gr}}{15 \mathrm{gr}} \times 20.1 \mathrm{ml}=1.34 \mathrm{ml} \mathrm{O}_{2}$[/tex]
What is haemoglobin?
- Haemoglobin, also spelt hemoglobin, an iron-containing protein in the blood of many animals—in the red blood cells of vertebrates—that transports oxygen to the tissues. Haemoglobin forms an unstable reversible bond with oxygen.
- Haemoglobin is a two-way respiratory carrier, transporting oxygen from the lungs to the tissues and facilitating the return transport of carbon dioxide.
- In the arterial circulation, haemoglobin has a high affinity for oxygen and a low affinity for carbon dioxide, organic phosphates, and hydrogen and chloride ions
To learn more about haemoglobin visit: https://brainly.com/question/28237951
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