Interesting reading, for sure. Unfortunately, the author makes numerous claims that are not directly supported by any evidence. No doubt, most of it is grounded in fact but some is personal opinion.
In a nutshell, there are two things happening in the lung at the time where the gas exchange takes place: Alveoli inflate with fresh air (and other organic compounds) at the beginning of the inhalation; as blood flows by in the pulmonary capillary bed surrounding the alveoli gas exchange takes place by osmosis, movement from an area of high concentration to low. When equilibrium is reached in the alveoli no other transfer is possible until a new supply of fresh air is available. The alveoli are so small that this is done is seconds. any vapor exhaled is from anatomical dead space and is wasted.
Interesting analysis but you left out two important facts that are relevant to amount of active ingredients absorbed relative to how long the vapor or smoke is held in.
1) First, consider the nature of the lungs:
The right lung has three sections called lobes. The left lung has two lobes. When you breathe, the air enters the body through the nose or the mouth. It then travels down the throat through the larynx (voice box) and trachea (windpipe) and goes into the lungs through tubes called mainstem bronchi.
One mainstem bronchus leads to the right lung and one to the left lung. In the lungs, the mainstem bronchi divide into smaller bronchi and then into even smaller tubes called bronchioles. Bronchioles end in tiny air sacs called alveoli.
The relevant fact is that the portion of lung capacity that is within the throat, larynx, trachea, mainstream bronchi and bronchioles is considerable and yet these portions of the total lung capacity are not designed to absorb oxygen and other compounds into the blood via osmosis in an efficient manner. However, oxygen and other compounds trapped in these areas can sill migrate into the alveoli (via diffusion) where they can be absorbed into the blood via osmosis. But this diffusion is not instantaneous, it takes time.
2) Secondly, the fact that osmosis can only occur from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration is used to make the claim that the blood becomes saturated and can not absorb more. But this ignores that the heart is continuously circulating blood through the lungs alveoli and the new blood entering has a lower concentration of absorbed compounds than the blood exiting the alveoli.
The result is that holding a hit in longer than 5 seconds will result in more absorption of the compounds inhaled. This is something I've experienced first-hand over the last few decades.
On another note; I just learned that the FF that I returned last Monday was not repairable, they did not tell me what part or parts failed. FF has shipped me a new FF as a warranty replacement. That's what I call great customer service! .
Excellent news!
I'm not in a medical state. If I tried to bring it somewhere like a sportingn event, concert or somewhere you get searched they are gonna ask questions
I guess I'm surprised they would allow e-cigars into the event but not an e-pipe or e-vape like the Firefly.
Because either one could be loaded with tobacco products or marijuana/hash oil.
I do agree a smaller unit would be easier to conceal.