首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Creating artificial gills Background Taking in oxygen; mammals — lungs; fish — gills Long-held dreams — humans swimming
Creating artificial gills Background Taking in oxygen; mammals — lungs; fish — gills Long-held dreams — humans swimming
admin
2022-03-30
109
问题
Creating artificial gills
Background
Taking in oxygen; mammals — lungs; fish — gills
Long-held dreams — humans swimming underwater without oxygen tanks
Oxygen tanks considered too【L31】________and large
Attempts to extract oxygen directly from water
1960s — prediction that humans would have gills added by【L32】________
Ideas for artificial gills were inspired by research on
fish gills
fish swim bladders
animals without gills — especially bubbles used by【L33】________
Building a simple artificial gill
Make a watertight box of a material which lets【L34】________pass through
Fill with air and submerge in water
Important that the diver and the water keep【L35】________
The gill has to have a large【L36】________
Designers often use a network of small【L37】________on their gill
Main limitation — problems caused by increased【L38】________ in deeper water
Other applications
Supplying oxygen for use on【L39】________
Powering【L40】________cells for driving machinery underwater
【L38】
In my talk today I’ll be exploring the idea of artificial gills. I’ll start by introducing the concept, giving some background and so forth and then I’ll go on to explain the technological applications, including a short, very simple, experiment I conducted.
Starting with the background... As everyone knows, all living creatures need oxygen to live. Mammals take in oxygen from the atmosphere by using their lungs, and fishes take oxygen from water by means of their gills, which of course in most fishes are located either side of their head.
But human beings have always dreamt of being able to swim underwater like the fishes, breathing without the help of oxygen tanks. I don’t know whether any of you have done any scuba diving but it’s a real pain having to use all that equipment. You need special training,
and it’s generally agreed that tanks are too heavy and big
to enable most people to move and work comfortably underwater. So scientists are trying a different tack: rather than humans carrying an oxygen supply as they go underwater, wouldn’t it possible to extract oxygen in situ, that is, directly from the water, whilst swimming?
In the nineteen sixties the famous underwater explorer Jacques Cousteau, for example,
predicted that one day surgery could be used to equip humans with gills.
He believed our lungs could be bypassed and we would learn to live underwater just as naturally as we live on land. But of course, most of us would prefer not to go to such extremes.
I’ve been looking at some fairly simple technologies developed to extract oxygen from water — ways to produce a simple, practical artificial gill enabling humans to live and breathe in water without harm. Now, how scientists and inventors went about this was to look at the way different animals handled this — fairly obviously they looked at the way fishes breathe but also how they move down and float up to the surface using inflatable sacs, called swim bladders.
Scientists also looked at animals without gills, which use bubbles of air underwater, notably beetles.
These insects contrive to stay underwater for long periods by breathing from this bubble which they hold under their wing cases.
By looking at these animal adaptations, inventors began to come up with their own ’artificial gills’. Now making a crude gill is actually rather easy — more straightforward than you would think. You take a watertight box,
which is made of a material which is permeable to gas, that is, it allows it to pass through,
inwards and outwards. You then fill this with air, fix it to the diver’s face and go down underwater.
But a crucial factor is that the diver has to keep the water moving,
so that water high in oxygen is always in contact with the gill, so he can’t really stay still.
And to maximise this contact it’s necessary for your gill to have a big surface area.
Different gill designers have addressed this problem in different ways,
but many choose to use a network or lattice-arrangement of tiny tubes as part of their artificial gills.
Then the diver is able to breathe in and out — oxygen from the water passes through the outer walls of the gill and carbon-dioxide is expelled. In a nut-shell, that’s how the artificial gill works.
So, having read about these simple gill mechanisms, I decided to create my own. I followed the procedure I’ve just described and it worked pretty well when I tried it out in the swimming pool... I lasted underwater for nearly forty minutes! However, I’ve read about other people breathing through their gill for several hours.
So the basic idea works well,
but the real limitation is that these simple gills don’t work as the diver descends to any great depth because the pressure builds
and a whole different set of problems are caused by that. Research is being done into how these problems might be overcome, but that’s another story which has to be the subject of another talk!
Despite this serious limitation, many people have high hopes for the artificial gill and they think it might have applications beyond simply enabling an individual to stay underwater for a length of time. For example,
the same technology might be used to provide oxygen for submarines,
enabling them to stay submerged for months on end without resorting to potentially dangerous technologies such as nuclear power.
Another idea is to use oxygen derived from the water as energy for fuel cells.
These could power machinery underwater, such as robotic devices...
So, in my view, this is an area of technology with great potential. Now, if anyone has any questions, I’d be happy to answer...
选项
答案
pressure
解析
局限在于这些简单的腮在潜水员沉入很深的地方时就不起作用了,因为压强增加了(pressure builds)。录音原文中的builds是指(压力、速度等)逐渐变大增强,对应题目中的increased。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/xq8O777K
本试题收录于:
雅思听力题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思听力
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
Completeeachofthefollowingstatements(Questions37-40)withanamefromtheReadingpassage.Writeyouranswersinboxes37-
WESTTHAMESCOLLEGEBACKGROUNDINFORMATIONFORCANDIDATESWestThamesCollege(initiallyknownasHounslowBoroughC
THECONCEPTOFROLETHEORYRolesetAnyindividualinanysituationoccupiesaroleinrelationtootherpeople.Theparticular
THECONCEPTOFROLETHEORYRolesetAnyindividualinanysituationoccupiesaroleinrelationtootherpeople.Theparticular
Lookatthenoticebelow.UsingNOMORETHANTHREEWORDSAND/ORANUMBERanswerthefollowingquestions.Writeyouranswersinb
Youshouldspendabout20minutesonQuestions27-40,whicharebasedonReadingPassage3below.ArtificialartistsCancompute
Timekeeper:InventionofMarineChronometerA.Uptothemiddleofthe18thcentury,thenavigatorswerestillunabletoexa
CompletethenotesbelowbywritingNOMORETHANTHREEWORDSinthespacesprovided.TheGovernmentplanstogive【T14】$______to
Completethenotesbelow.WriteNOMORETHANTWOWORDSAND/ORANUMBERforeachanswer.BirminghamexhibitionExampleAnswerPur
Enid,Oklahoma,______astoppingplaceondieChisholmTrailinthe1800’s,isnowthesiteofthefourthlargestwheatstorage
随机试题
与胸骨角外侧端相连结的是()
归脾汤最适宜于治疗郁证的证型是( )
男性,50岁,突发高热、寒战,会阴部疼痛,排尿痛,尿道有炎性分泌物,肛诊前列腺肿胀、压痛、局部温度升高。该病例的治疗,下列哪项是错误的
卵巢黏液性囊腺瘤来源于卵巢表面的生发上皮
膳食钙吸收率变化趋势是
瘢痕性幽门梗阻的治疗中下列哪项是错误的
《药品经营许可证管理办法》规定,开办药品零售企业必须具有()
关于第一次工地会议的说法正确的是()。
下列关于路由器技术指标的描述中,正确的是
A.lookingB.focusonC.variousD.extensiveE.regionF.differencesG.famousH.
最新回复
(
0
)