SpO₂ is 91% on 4 L/min via nasal cannula. The registrar asks 'What's the FiO₂?' before writing up the ABG request. You need the number now.
Nasal cannula: 1L=24% · 2L=28% · 4L=36% · 6L=44%
Simple mask: 5–6L=35–40% · 8–10L=50–60%
NRB mask: 10–15L=80–95% · Venturi: fixed FiO₂ per barrel colour
HFNC: set FiO₂ 21–100% · BVM with O₂: ~100%
SpO₂ target: 94–98% (most adults) · 88–92% (COPD/hypercapnic)
1 What this calculator does
Converts between oxygen flow rate (L/min) and estimated FiO₂ for the four most common delivery devices: nasal cannula, simple face mask, non-rebreather mask (NRB) and Venturi mask. Also converts FiO₂ to approximate flow rate for device selection.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Nasal cannula FiO₂ ≈ 0.20 + (0.04 × Flow rate L/min)
Simple mask: 5 L/min ≈ 35–40%, 10 L/min ≈ 55–60%
Venturi mask: exact FiO₂ set by colour-coded adapter (24%, 28%, 31%, 35%, 40%, 60%)
NRB mask at 12–15 L/min: FiO₂ ≈ 0.80–0.90
FiO₂ estimates for low-flow devices are approximate because they depend on the patient's inspiratory flow rate, tidal volume, and respiratory pattern. A tachypnoeic patient dilutes supplemental oxygen more with room air, reducing effective FiO₂. Only Venturi (Venimask) devices deliver precise FiO₂, making them the device of choice when accurate oxygen titration is critical (COPD target saturation 88–92%).
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
FiO₂ ≈ 0.20 + (0.04 × 2) = 0.20 + 0.08Estimated FiO₂ ≈ 35–45% range (flow-dependent)Venturi delivers exactly 28% regardless of respiratory pattern4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treating nasal cannula FiO₂ formula as precise | Citing 44% for 6 L/min as if exact | Clinical decisions based on inaccurate FiO₂ estimate | Nasal cannula estimates are approximate (±5%). For precision, use Venturi mask. State 'estimated FiO₂' in documentation. |
| Running simple mask at < 5 L/min | Trying to conserve oxygen | Patient rebreathes exhaled CO₂ from mask dead space | Simple mask minimum 5 L/min — preferably 6 L/min for adequate CO₂ washout |
| Not checking reservoir bag on NRB | Setting flow and walking away | Reservoir collapses on deep breaths — patient gets room air entrained | Set NRB at 12–15 L/min. Reservoir bag must stay inflated throughout inspiration. |
| Using NRB on COPD patient without care | Maximising oxygen delivery | Hypercapnic drive suppression — respiratory depression in susceptible patients | For COPD: target SpO₂ 88–92% using Venturi 24% or 28% adapter. Document prescribed oxygen target. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: