Early history Around 1620,
Cornelis Drebbel discovered that heating saltpetre (
potassium nitrate) would generate oxygen. The first basic rebreather based on
carbon dioxide absorption was patented in
France in 1808 by
Pierre-Marie Touboulic from
Brest, a mechanic in
Napoleon's Imperial Navy. This early rebreather design worked with an oxygen reservoir, the oxygen being delivered progressively by the diver and circulating in a closed circuit through a
sponge soaked in
limewater, a solution of calcium hydroxide in water. Touboulic called his invention
Ichtioandre (Greek for 'fish-man'). There is no evidence of a prototype having been manufactured. A prototype rebreather was built in 1849 by
Pierre Aimable De Saint Simon Sicard, In 1853 Professor T. Schwann presented a rebreather at the
Belgian Academy of Science. It had a large back mounted oxygen tank with working pressure of about 13.3 bar, and two scrubbers containing
sponges soaked in a
caustic soda solution.
Working rebreathers , inventor of the rebreather The first commercially practical closed-circuit scuba was designed and built by the diving engineer
Henry Fleuss in 1878, while working for
Siebe Gorman in London. His
self-contained breathing apparatus consisted of a rubber mask connected to a breathing bag, with (estimated) 50–60% O2 supplied from a copper tank and CO2 scrubbed by rope yarn soaked in a solution of caustic potash; the system giving a duration of about three hours. Fleuss tested his device in 1879 by spending an hour submerged in a water tank, then one week later by diving to a depth of 5.5 m in open water, upon which occasion he was slightly injured when his assistants abruptly pulled him to the surface. His apparatus was first used under operational conditions in 1880 by Alexander Lambert, the lead diver on the
Severn Tunnel construction project, who was able to travel 1000 feet in the darkness to close several submerged
sluice doors in the tunnel; this had defeated his best efforts with
standard diving dress due to the danger of the air supply hose becoming fouled on submerged debris, and the strong water currents in the workings. In 1880 Fleuss used a rebreather to inspect Seaham Colliery in the UK after a gas explosion. Fleuss and Siebe Gorban developed the
Proto breathing apparatus for mine rescue in 1911. Fleuss continually improved his apparatus, adding a demand regulator and tanks capable of holding greater amounts of oxygen at higher pressure. Sir
Robert Davis, head of
Siebe Gorman, improved the oxygen rebreather in 1910 with his invention of the
Davis Submerged Escape Apparatus, the first practical rebreather to be made in quantity. While intended primarily as an emergency escape apparatus for
submarine crews, it was soon also used for
diving, being a handy shallow water diving apparatus with a thirty-minute endurance, and as an
industrial breathing set. being tested at the submarine escape test tank at
HMS Dolphin, Gosport, 14 December 1942 The rig comprised a rubber breathing/buoyancy bag containing a canister of
barium hydroxide to scrub exhaled
CO2 and, in a pocket at the lower end of the bag, a steel pressure cylinder holding approximately 56 litres of
oxygen at a pressure of 120 bar. The cylinder was equipped with a control valve and was connected to the
breathing bag. Opening the cylinder's valve admitted oxygen to the bag and charged it to the pressure of the surrounding water. The rig also included an emergency buoyancy bag on the front of to help keep the wearer afloat. The DSEA was adopted by the
Royal Navy after further development by Davis in 1927. Various industrial oxygen rebreathers such as the
Siebe Gorman Salvus and the
Siebe Gorman Proto, both invented in the early 1900s, were derived from it. Professor Georges Jaubert invented the chemical compound Oxylithe in 1907. It was a form of
sodium peroxide (Na2O2) or
sodium superoxide (NaO2). As it absorbs
carbon dioxide in a rebreather's scrubber it emits oxygen. This compound was first incorporated into a rebreather design by Captain S.S. Hall and Dr. O. Rees of the
Royal Navy in 1909. Although intended for use as a submarine escape apparatus, it was never accepted by the Royal Navy and was instead used for shallow water diving. In 1912 the German firm
Dräger began mass production of their own version of standard diving dress with the air supply from a rebreather. The apparatus had been invented some years earlier by Hermann Stelzner, an engineer at the Dräger company, for
mine rescue. In the 1930s, after some tragic accidents in the 1920s, the
United States Navy began to equip
Porpoise- and
Salmon-class submarines with primitive rebreathers called
Momsen lungs, which were in use until the 1960s.
Rebreathers during World War II In the 1930s,
Italian sport
spearfishers began to use the
Davis rebreather; Italian manufacturers received a licence from the English patent holders to produce it. This practice soon came to the attention of the
Italian Navy, which developed an extensively upgraded model designed by
Teseo Tesei and that was used by its frogman unit
Decima Flottiglia MAS with good results during World War II. During the
Second World War, captured Italian frogmen's rebreathers influenced improved designs for British rebreathers. Many British frogmen's breathing sets used aircrew breathing oxygen cylinders salvaged from shot-down German
Luftwaffe aircraft. The earliest of these breathing sets may have been modified
Davis Submerged Escape Apparatus; their fullface masks were the type intended for the
Siebe Gorman Salvus, but in later operations different designs were used, leading to a
fullface mask with one big face window, at first circular or oval and later rectangular (mostly flat, but the sides curved back to allow better vision sideways). Early British frogman's rebreathers had rectangular counterlungs on the chest like Italian frogman's rebreathers, but later designs had a square recess in the top of the counterlung so it could extend further up toward the shoulders. In front they had a rubber collar that was clamped around the absorbent canister. Some British armed forces divers used bulky thick diving suits called
Sladen suits; one version of it had a flip-up single faceplate for both eyes to let the user get
binoculars to his eyes when on the surface. The Dräger rebreathers, especially the DM20 and DM40 model series, were used by the German
helmet divers and German
frogmen during
World War II. Rebreathers for the
US Navy were developed by Dr.
Christian J. Lambertsen for underwater warfare. Lambertsen held the first closed-circuit oxygen rebreather course in the United States for the
Office of Strategic Services maritime unit at the
Naval Academy on 17 May 1943. During and after
WWII, needs arose in the armed forces to dive deeper than allowed by pure oxygen. That prompted, at least in Britain, design of simple constant-flow "mixture rebreather" variants of some of their diving oxygen rebreathers (= what is now called "
nitrox"): SCMBA from the SCBA (
Swimmer Canoeist's Breathing Apparatus), and CDMBA from the
Siebe Gorman CDBA, by adding an extra gas supply cylinder. Before a dive with such a set, the diver had to know the maximum or working depth of his dive, and how fast his body used his oxygen supply, and from those to calculate what to set his rebreather's gas flow rate to.
Post-WWII The diving pioneer
Hans Hass used
Dräger oxygen rebreathers in the early 1940s for underwater cinematography. Due to the military importance of the rebreather, amply demonstrated during the naval campaigns of the
Second World War, most governments were reluctant to issue the technology into the public domain. In Britain rebreather use for civilians was negligible, and the
BSAC formally prohibited rebreather use by its members. The Italian firms
Pirelli and
Cressi-Sub at first each sold a model of sport diving rebreather, but after a while discontinued those models. Some home made rebreathers were used by
cave divers to penetrate
cave sumps. Most high-altitude mountaineers use open-circuit oxygen equipment; the
1953 Everest expedition used both closed-circuit and open-circuit oxygen equipment: see
bottled oxygen. Eventually the
Cold War ended, and in 1989 the
Communist Bloc collapsed, and as a result the perceived risk of sabotage attacks by
combat divers dwindled, and Western armed forces had less reason to requisition civilian rebreather
patents, and automatic and semi-automatic recreational diving rebreathers with
oxygen partial pressure sensors started to appear. ==Manufacturers and models==