Scuba Diving Pressure

Understanding Pressure Underwater

Dive Into the Science

Pressure is the fundamental challenge of scuba diving. At depth, increased pressure affects your body, your equipment, and how long your air supply lasts. Understanding pressure in atmospheres (ATM), bar, and PSI helps divers plan safe dives and manage their air consumption.

Pressure vs Depth

Depth (m)Depth (ft)Pressure (ATM)Pressure (bar)Pressure (PSI)
0 (surface)011.0114.7
103322.0129.4
206633.0244.1
309944.0358.8
4013255.0373.5
5016566.0488.2

Why Pressure Matters

Air Consumption

At depth, you breathe compressed air at ambient pressure. At 2 ATM (10m), you use air twice as fast as at the surface. At 4 ATM (30m), four times as fast.

DepthPressureAir Consumption Rate
Surface1 ATM1× (baseline)
10m / 33ft2 ATM2× surface rate
20m / 66ft3 ATM3× surface rate
30m / 99ft4 ATM4× surface rate

Decompression

At higher pressure, nitrogen dissolves into body tissues. Rising too quickly allows bubbles to form, causing decompression sickness. Dive tables and computers calculate safe ascent rates and decompression stops based on pressure exposure.

Tank Pressure

US (PSI)

  • Full tank: 3000 PSI (typical aluminum 80)
  • Turn pressure: 1500 PSI (plan to ascend)
  • Reserve: 500 PSI (safety margin)
  • Empty: ~200 PSI (don't go below)

International (Bar)

  • Full tank: 200-232 bar (steel tanks: 232+)
  • Turn pressure: 100-120 bar
  • Reserve: 50 bar
  • Minimum: 30-50 bar

Boyle's Law in Action

Boyle's Law states that pressure × volume = constant. For divers, this means:

  • Descending: Increasing pressure compresses air spaces
  • Ascending: Decreasing pressure expands air spaces

Volume Changes by Depth

DepthPressureAir Volume
Surface1 ATM100% (1 liter)
10m / 33ft2 ATM50% (0.5 liter)
20m / 66ft3 ATM33% (0.33 liter)
30m / 99ft4 ATM25% (0.25 liter)

This is why ears must equalize on descent (air spaces compress) and why ascents must be slow (air spaces expand).

Converting Dive Pressure Units

Tank Pressure

  • Bar to PSI: Multiply by 14.5 (200 bar = 2900 PSI)
  • PSI to bar: Divide by 14.5 (3000 PSI = 207 bar)

Depth/Ambient Pressure

  • ATM to bar: Multiply by 1.01 (essentially equal)
  • ATM to PSI: Multiply by 14.7

Quick Reference

Tank PSIBarStatus
3000207Full
2500172Starting dive
1500103Turn around
100069Begin ascent
50034Reserve

Conclusion

Understanding pressure is essential for safe scuba diving. Pressure doubles at just 10 meters depth, affecting air consumption, buoyancy, and decompression requirements. Whether you're reading your tank pressure in PSI or bar, the principles are the same: monitor your air, respect the physics, and ascend slowly. These pressure relationships govern every dive you'll ever make.

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Scuba Diving Pressure: Understanding ATM, Bar, and PSI Underwater | YounitConverter