1, vital capacity standard for male college students:
Freshman and sophomore: 4800-5040 ml is excellent, 4300-4550 ml is good, 3 100-4 180 ml is qualified, and 2300-2940 ml is failed.
Junior and senior: 4900-5 140ml is excellent, 4400-4650ml is good, 3200-4280ml is pass, and 2350-3030ml is fail.
2, female college students' vital capacity standard:
Freshman and sophomore: 3300-3400 ml is excellent, 3000-3 150 ml is good, 2000-2900 ml is passing, and 1800- 1960 ml is failing.
Junior and senior: 3350-3450 ml excellent, 3050-3200 ml good, 2050-2950 ml pass, 1850-20 10 ml fail.
Vital capacity refers to the amount of air you try to exhale after the maximum inhalation. Include tidal volume, inspiratory volume and expiratory volume.
Tidal volume refers to the amount of air inhaled or exhaled by the lungs in a breathing cycle. The maximum air volume inhaled after tidal volume is supplementary inspiratory volume, the maximum air volume exhaled after tidal volume is supplementary expiratory volume, and the maximum air volume left in the lungs after exhalation is residual volume.
Individuals vary greatly. It is influenced by age, sex, figure, respiratory muscle strength and lung and chest elasticity. Generally speaking, the stronger the body, the bigger it is. The research shows that it has a high correlation with the maximum oxygen uptake. It is often used as an index to evaluate people's quality.