How do hospitals generate or store oxygen? How do they transmit oxygen to patients?
April 13th, 2009 | by Rick |Sportsman23 asked:
How do hospitals receive and store oxygen? Do they have individual tanks in each room or large tanks that distribute oxygen to all of the rooms? Do they use liquid oxygen? If they receive it from a supplier that refills a large, stationary tank, is it done so by a special truck?
MERLIN
How do hospitals receive and store oxygen? Do they have individual tanks in each room or large tanks that distribute oxygen to all of the rooms? Do they use liquid oxygen? If they receive it from a supplier that refills a large, stationary tank, is it done so by a special truck?
MERLIN







4 Responses to “How do hospitals generate or store oxygen? How do they transmit oxygen to patients?”
By KEVIN on Apr 14, 2009 | Reply
CARY
They have it in those tank, you know those diving tank.
By HARLAN on Apr 15, 2009 | Reply
MARLON
actually their are different processes of forming the oxygen either by the distillation of air or by the electrolysis of water.
oxygen is stored in the big cylinders labelled as B O C and they are transported to where they are required mainly for the pulmonary dysfunctional patients
By GAVIN on Apr 16, 2009 | Reply
EDGAR
at my university there are always big oxygen trucks that have “Twin Citites Oxygen” signs on them. they deliver oxygen to the medical school, physics department, etc… outside of the chemical engineering and materials science building there are large tanks full of nitrogen and oxygen and other such chemicals with pipes leading into the building. In Kolthoff Hall they have giant tanks of liquid nitrogen inside the research labs. They probably have oxygen tanks like this too.
By RUDY on Apr 18, 2009 | Reply
SHELBY
Every hospital I have ever worked or trained at (~10 hospitals) had a central storage facility, A giant refrigerated tank of liquid oxygen,
Oxygen delivery is a built-in utility in every hospital similar to water, sewer and electrical lines.
They have conduits running to all the patient rooms where oxygen can flow from a wall spout for multiple uses, chiefly oxygen nasal canulas and masks.
Hospitals also maintain hundreds of portable oxygen tanks for patient transport. These are either refilled onsite from the central storage tank or are delivered refilled by a servoice.