❤️ P5/P6 · PSLE Topic

Respiratory and Circulatory Systems

Respiratory and circulatory systems explained for PSLE Science. Lungs, alveoli, heart, blood vessels, and blood components — with Singapore examples and exam tips for P5/P6.

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Syllabus
P5/P6 · PSLE
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Reading time
8 minutes
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Exam weight
High — often tested
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Key skill
Apply + explain

Two Systems That Work as Partners

Your body needs oxygen constantly — every cell in your body uses it to release energy from glucose through respiration. The respiratory system (lungs and airways) is responsible for getting oxygen into your body and removing carbon dioxide. The circulatory system (heart, blood vessels, and blood) then transports that oxygen — and nutrients from digested food — to every cell.

The two systems meet at the lungs: blood arrives carrying CO₂, swaps it for oxygen, and then the heart pumps the oxygenated blood around the body. They are partners — neither can work without the other.

These Systems in Action in Singapore

During the NAPFA fitness test at school, your muscles are working hard and need much more energy. To produce this energy through respiration, they need more oxygen and produce more CO₂. Your body responds: your breathing rate increases (to get more oxygen into the blood faster) and your heart rate increases (to deliver that oxygen to the muscles faster). You feel your chest heaving and your pulse racing — that is both systems working at maximum capacity.

During the 2019–2020 haze periods, fine PM2.5 particles from Indonesian forest fires entered Singaporeans' lungs. These tiny particles penetrate deep into the alveoli and can lodge there, reducing the surface available for gas exchange and causing breathing difficulties — especially in the elderly and those with asthma. This is why the NEA issues health advisories and recommends N95 masks that filter these particles.

Blood donation drives by HSA (Health Sciences Authority) in Singapore remind us that blood is a living transport system. One donation of blood can save up to three lives — because each component (red cells, platelets, plasma) can be separated and used for different patients.

The Journey of Air into Your Body

ComponentInhaled airExhaled air
Oxygen~21%~16% (less O₂ — absorbed by blood)
Carbon dioxide~0.04%~4% (more CO₂ — from respiration)
Nitrogen~78%~78% (unchanged)
Water vapourVariable (lower)Higher — lungs add moisture
TemperatureAmbientWarmer (body temperature)

Gas Exchange — Where Oxygen Meets Blood

Alveoli are tiny air sacs — there are about 600 million in a pair of human lungs. Despite being so small (each only 0.2mm across), together they provide a surface area of approximately 70 m² — about 40 times the surface area of your entire skin. This enormous surface area is the key to efficient gas exchange.

Each alveolus is:

Oxygen diffuses from the alveolus (high concentration) into the blood capillary (low concentration). Carbon dioxide diffuses in the opposite direction. This happens simultaneously and continuously with every breath.

The Heart, Blood Vessels, and the Double Loop

The heart is a muscular pump that beats about 70 times per minute at rest, pumping blood in a double circulation:

Blood vessels:

The Four Components of Blood

Why Are Alveoli So Numerous and So Tiny?

The total surface area of the alveoli (70 m²) is achieved not by having one large air sac, but by having 600 million tiny ones. This is mathematically much more efficient — for a given volume of lung tissue, millions of tiny spheres have dramatically more total surface area than a few large ones. This is the same principle used by villi in the small intestine and root hair cells in plant roots.

The thinness of alveolar walls minimises the distance that oxygen molecules must travel by diffusion to get from air to blood — and diffusion is much faster over shorter distances. If the walls were thicker, gas exchange would be too slow to supply the body's oxygen needs, especially during exercise.

Common Mistakes

Trap 1 — Arteries always carry oxygenated blood
WRONG. Arteries carry blood AWAY from the heart. The pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood FROM the heart TO the lungs. "Arteries = away from heart" is the rule — not "arteries = oxygenated."
Trap 2 — Exhaled air has no oxygen
Exhaled air still contains ~16% oxygen — only about 5% less than inhaled air. This is why mouth-to-mouth resuscitation works — the 16% O₂ in exhaled air is enough to keep a person alive. You do NOT exhale all the oxygen you breathe in.
Trap 3 — The heart pumps blood to lungs and body simultaneously
The heart has four chambers — the right side pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs; the left side pumps oxygenated blood to the body. These are two separate circuits operating simultaneously.

Key Points at a Glance

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