Oxygen K-12 Experiments
Oxygen Background
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| General |
| Name, Symbol, Number |
oxygen, O, 8 |
| Chemical series |
Nonmetals, chalcogens |
| Group, Period, Block |
16, 2, p |
| Appearance |
colorless (gas)
very pale blue (liquid)
 |
| Atomic mass |
15.9994(3) g·mol−1 |
| Electron configuration |
1s2 2s2 2p4 |
| Electrons per shell |
2, 6 |
| Physical properties |
| Phase |
gas |
| Density |
(0 °C, 101.325 kPa)
1.429 g/mL |
| Melting point |
54.36 K
(-218.79 °C, -361.82 °F) |
| Boiling point |
90.20 K
(-182.95 °C, -297.31 °F) |
| Critical point |
154.59 K, 5.043 MPa |
| Heat of fusion |
(O2) 0.444 kJ·mol−1 |
| Heat of vaporization |
(O2) 6.82 kJ·mol−1 |
| Heat capacity |
(25 °C) (O2)
29.378 J·mol−1·K−1 |
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|
| Atomic properties |
| Crystal structure |
cubic |
| Oxidation states |
−2, −1
(neutral oxide) |
| Electronegativity |
3.44 (Pauling scale) |
Ionization energies
(more) |
1st: 1313.9 kJ·mol−1 |
| 2nd: 3388.3 kJ·mol−1 |
| 3rd: 5300.5 kJ·mol−1 |
| Atomic radius |
60 pm |
| Atomic radius (calc.) |
48 pm |
| Covalent radius |
73 pm |
| Van der Waals radius |
152 pm |
| Miscellaneous |
| Magnetic ordering |
paramagnetic |
| Thermal conductivity |
(300 K) 26.58 m W·m−1·K−1 |
| Speed of sound |
(gas, 27 °C) 330 m/s |
| CAS registry number |
7782-44-7 |
| Selected isotopes |
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| References |
Oxygen (IPA: /ˈɔksidʒən/) is a chemical element with the chemical symbol O and atomic number 8. On Earth it is usually bonded to other elements covalently or ionically.
Unbound oxygen (also called molecular oxygen, or dioxygen, O2, a diatomic molecule) first appeared in significant quantities on Earth during the Paleoproterozoic era (between 2.5 billion years ago and 1.6 billion years ago) as a product of the metabolic action of early anaerobes (archaea and bacteria). The presence of large amounts of free oxygen may have driven most of the organisms then living to extinction.
The atmospheric abundance of free oxygen in later geological epochs and
its gradual increase up to the present has been largely driven by photosynthetic organisms; about three quarters of the free element being produced by algae in the oceans, and one quarter from terrestrial plants.
Characteristics
By an interesting coincidence of nature, liquid oxygen has a sky blue color. It is important to note however, that the two phenomena are totally unrelated (the blue of sky is due to Rayleigh scattering and would be present even if there were no oxygen in air).
Oxygen is a major component of air, produced by plants during photosynthesis, and is necessary for aerobic respiration in animals. The word oxygen derives from two roots in Greek, οξυς (oxys) (acid, sharp) and -γενης (-genēs) (born of). In the early 18th century, Antoine Lavoisier
coined the name oxygen from the Greek roots mentioned above because he
erroneously thought that it was a constituent of all acids. (The definition of acid has since been revised).Oxygen has a valency of 2.
At standard temperature and pressure, oxygen exists as a diatomic molecule with the formula O2, in which the two oxygen atoms are doubly bonded to each other. In its most stable form, oxygen exists as a diradical (triplet oxygen) with two unpaired electrons in molecular orbitals of the O2
molecule. Though unpaired electrons are commonly associated with high
reactivity in chemical compounds, triplet oxygen is relatively (and
fortunately) unreactive by comparison with most radicals.
Singlet oxygen,
a name given to several higher energy species of molecular oxygen in
which all the electron spins are paired, is much more reactive towards
common organic
molecules. In nature, singlet oxygen is commonly formed from water
during photosynthesis, using the energy of sunlight. It is also
produced by the immune system as a source of active oxygen. Carotenoids
in photosynthetic organisms and possibly also in animals, play a major
role in absorbing energy from singlet oxygen and converting it to the
unexcited ground state, before it can cause harm to tissues.
Liquid O2 and solid O2 are clear substances with a light sky-blue color. In normal triplet form they are paramagnetic
due to the spin magnetic moments of the unpaired electrons in the
molecule, and the negative exchange energy between neighbouring O2
molecules. Liquid oxygen is attracted to a magnet to a sufficient
extent that a bridge of liquid oxygen may be supported against its own
weight between the poles of a powerful magnet, in laboratory
demonstrations. Liquid O2 is usually obtained by the fractional distillation of liquid air.
Oxygen is slightly soluble in water, but naturally occurring dissolved amounts support all ocean animal life (see below).
O2 has a bond length of 121 pm and a bond energy of 498 kJ/mol.
Allotropes
Dioxygen, O 2,
is a gas at standard conditions, consisting of 2-atom molecules.
Elemental oxygen is most commonly encountered in this form, as 21% of
Earth's atmosphere.
Ozone, O 3,
is a gas at standard conditions, consisting of 3-atom molecules. This
oxygen allotrope is rare on Earth and is found mostly in the
stratosphere.
The common allotrope of elemental oxygen on Earth, O2, is known as dioxygen.
Ozone,
the less common triatomic allotrope of oxygen, is a poisonous gas with
a sharp odor. It is thermodynamically unstable toward the more common
dioxygen form. It is formed continuously in the upper atmosphere of the
Earth by short-wave UV radiation, and also functions as a shield
against UV radiation reaching the ground. Ozone has recently been found
to be produced by the immune system as an antimicrobial (see below).
Liquid and solid O3 (ozone) have a deeper blue color than ordinary oxygen, and they are unstable and explosive.
A recently discovered allotrope of oxygen, tetraoxygen (O4), is a deep red solid that is created by pressurizing O2 to the order of 20 GPa. Its properties are being studied for use in rocket fuels and similar applications, as it is a much more powerful oxidizer than either O2 or O3.[1][2]
Applications
Uptake of oxygen from the air is the essential purpose of respiration, so oxygen supplementation has found use in medicine (as oxygen therapy). People who climb mountains or fly in non-pressurized aeroplanes
sometimes have supplemental oxygen supplies; the reason is that
increasing the proportion of oxygen in the breathing gas at low
pressure acts to augment the inspired oxygen partial pressure nearer to that found at sea-level. A notable application of oxygen as a very low-pressure breathing gas, is in modern spacesuits, where use of nearly pure oxygen at a total ambient pressure of about one third normal, results in normal blood partial pressures
of oxygen. This trade-off of breathing gas content and needed pressure
is important for space applications, because the issue of flexible
spacesuits working at Earth sea-level pressures remains a technological
challenge of aerospace technology.
Oxygen is used in welding (such as the oxyacetylene torch), and in the industrial production of steel and methanol. Also, liquid oxygen finds use as a classic oxidizer in rocket propulsion.
Oxygen presents two spectrophotometric absorption bands
peaking at the wavelengths 687 and 760 nanometers. Some scientists have
proposed to use the measurement of the radiance coming from vegetation
canopies in those oxygen bands to characterize plant health status from
a satellite platform. This is because in those bands, it is possible to discriminate the vegetation's reflectance from the vegetation's fluorescence, which is much weaker. The measurement presents several technical difficulties due to the low signal to noise ratio and due to the vegetation's architecture, but it has been proposed as a possibility to monitor the carbon cycle from satellites on a global scale.
Oxygen, as a supposed mild euphoric, has a history of recreational use (see oxygen bar).
However, the reality of a pharmacological effect is doubtful being a
metabolic boost the most plausible explanation. Controlled tests of
high oxygen mixtures in diving (see nitrox)
and other activities, even at higher than normal pressures,
demonstrated no particular effects on humans other than promotion of an
increased tolerance to aerobic exercise.
In the 19th century, oxygen was often mixed with nitrous oxide to temper its analgesic effect. A stable 50% gaseous mixture (Entonox)
is commonly used in medicine today as an analgesic. However, the common
basic anaesthetic mixture is 30% oxygen with 70% nitrous oxide; the
pain-suppressing effects, obviously, are due to the nitrous oxide and not to oxygen.
Scientific history
Oxygen was first described by Michał Sędziwój, a Polish alchemist and philosopher in the late 16th century. Sędziwój thought of the gas given off by warm nitre (saltpeter) as "the elixir of life".[3]
Oxygen was more quantitatively discovered by the Swedish pharmacist Carl Wilhelm Scheele some time before 1773, but the discovery was not published until after the independent discovery by Joseph Priestley on August 1, 1774, who called the gas dephlogisticated air (see phlogiston theory). Priestley published discoveries in 1775 and Scheele in 1777; consequently Priestley is usually given the credit. Both Scheele and Priestley produced oxygen by heating mercuric oxide.
Scheele called the gas 'fire air' because it was the only known
supporter of combustion. It was later called 'vital air' because it was
and is vital for the existence of animal life.
The gas was named by Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, after Priestley's publication in 1775, from Greek roots meaning "acid-former". As noted, the name reflects the then-common incorrect belief that all acids contain oxygen.
Occurrence
Annual mean sea surface dissolved oxygen for the World Ocean. Note more oxygen in cold water near the poles. [4]
Oxygen is the third most abundant chemical element in the universe by mass, after hydrogen and helium (see chemical element). Some of this Oxygen was produced during stellar nucleosynthesis as a step in the CNO-II branch of the CNO cycle. However Oxygen is primarily produced in massive stars. In stars with at least four times the Sun's mass, 16O nuclei are produced during the Carbon burning process. 16O can also be produced in stars with at least 8 times the Sun's mass as a result of photodisintegration during the Neon burning process.[5]
Oxygen is the most common component of the Earth's crust (49% by mass),[6] the second most common component of the Earth
as a whole (28% by mass), the most common component of the world's
oceans (86% by mass), and the second most common component of the Earth's atmosphere (20.947% by volume), second to nitrogen.
Elemental oxygen occurs not only in the atmosphere, but also as solution in the world's water bodies. At 25° C under 1 atm of air, a litre of water will dissolve about 6.04 cc (8.63 mg, 0.270 mmol) of oxygen, whereas sea water
will dissolve about 4.9 cc (7.0 mg, 0.22 mmol). At 0° C the
solubilities increase to 10.29 cc (14.7 mg, 0.460 mmol) for water and
8.0 cc (11.4 mg, 0.36 mmol) for sea water. This difference has
important implications for ocean life, as polar oceans support a much
higher density of life due to their oxygen content. [7]
See also Silicate minerals, Oxide minerals.
Compounds
The most familiar of oxygen compounds is water.
Due to its electronegativity, oxygen forms chemical bonds with almost all other elements hence the original definition of oxidation. The only elements known to escape the possibility of oxidation are a few of the noble gases, and fluorine. Other than water (H2O), well known examples include compounds of carbon and oxygen, such as carbon dioxide (CO2), alcohols (R-OH), carbonyls, (R-CO-H or R-CO-R)), and carboxylic acids (R-COOH). Oxygenated radicals such as chlorates (ClO3−), perchlorates (ClO4−), chromates (CrO42−), dichromates (Cr2O72−), permanganates (MnO4−), and nitrates (NO3−) are strong oxidizing agents in and of themselves. Many metals such as iron bond with oxygen atoms, iron(III) oxide (Fe2O3). Ozone (O3) is formed by electrostatic discharge in the presence of molecular oxygen. A double oxygen molecule (O2)2 is known and is found as a minor component of liquid oxygen. Epoxides are ethers in which the oxygen atom is part of a ring of three atoms.
One unexpected oxygen compound is dioxygen hexafluoroplatinate O2+PtF6−. It was discovered when Neil Bartlett was studying the properties of PtF6. He noticed a change in color when this compound was exposed to atmospheric air. Bartlett reasoned that xenon should be oxidized by PtF6. This led him to the discovery of xenon hexafluoroplatinate Xe+PtF6−.
See also Oxygen compounds.
Isotopes
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Oxygen has seventeen known isotopes with atomic masses ranging from 12.03 u to 28.06 u. Three are stable, 16O, 17O, and 18O, of which 16O is the most abundant (over 99.7%). The radioisotopes all have half-lives of less than three minutes.
An atomic weight of 16 was assigned to oxygen prior to the definition of the unified atomic mass unit based upon 12C. Since physicists referred to 16O only, while chemists meant the naturally abundant mixture of isotopes, this led to slightly different atomic weight scales.
Precautions
Toxicity of O2
-
Oxygen can be toxic at elevated partial pressures.
Since oxygen partial pressure is the fraction of oxygen times the total
pressure, elevated partial pressures can occur either from high oxygen
fraction in breathing gas, or from high breathing gas pressure, or a
combination of both. Oxygen toxicity usually begins to occur at partial
pressures more than 0.5 atmospheres, or 2.5 times the normal sea-level
oxygen partial pressure of about 0.2 atmospheres or bars. This means
that at sea-level pressures, mixtures containing less than 50% oxygen
are essentially non-toxic. However in medical applications (such as in
ventilation gas mixtures in hospital applications) mixtures containing
more than 50% oxygen can be expected to show lung toxicity, causing
slow damage to the lungs over periods of days, with the rate of damage
rising rapidly from mixtures between 50% and 100% oxygen. On the other
hand, breathing 100% oxygen in space applications (such as in some
modern spacesuits, or in early spacecraft such as the Apollo spacecraft), causes no damage due to the low total pressures (30% to 33% sea-level) used.[8]
In the case of spacesuits, oxygen partial pressure in the breathing gas
is typically about 0.30 bar (1.4 times normal), and oxygen partial
pressure in the astronaut's blood (due to downward adjustments due to
water vapor and CO2 in the alveoli) is close to sea-level normal of 0.14 bar.
In deep scuba diving and surface supplied diving and when using equipment which can provide high partial pressures of oxygen, such as rebreathers,
oxygen toxicity to the lungs can occur, just as in medical
applications. Due to the higher total pressures in these applications,
the fraction of oxygen which produces lung damage may be considerably
less than 50%. More importantly, under pressures higher than normal
sea-level, a far more serious form of oxygen toxicity in the central nervous system may lead to generalized seizures. This form of oxygen toxicity usually occurs after several hours exposure to oxygen partial pressures
over about 1.4 atmospheres (bars) (i.e. 7 times normal), with the time
decreasing for higher pressures above this, and with great variation
from person to person. At over three bars of oxygen partial pressure
(15 times normal), seizures typically occur within minutes.
Toxicity and antibacterial use of other chemical oxygen forms
Certain derivatives of oxygen, such as ozone (O3), singlet oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radicals and superoxide,
are also highly toxic. Cells have developed various mechanisms to
protect against all of these toxic compounds. For instance, the
naturally-occurring glutathione can act as an antioxidant, as can bilirubin which is normally a breakdown product of hemoglobin. To protect against the destructive nature of peroxides, nearly every organism on earth has developed some form of the enzyme catalase, which very quickly disproportionates hydrogen peroxide
into water and dioxygen. Another nearly universally present enzyme in
living organisms (except for a few species of bacteria which use Mn2+ ions directly for the job) is superoxide dismutase. This family of enzymes disproportionates superoxide to oxygen and peroxide, which is then in turn dealt with, by catalase.
Immune systems of higher organisms have long made use of reactive
forms of oxygen which they produce. Not only do antibodies catalyze
production of peroxide from oxygen, it is now known that immune cells
produce peroxide, superoxide, and singlet oxygen in the course of an
immune response. Recently, singlet oxygen has been found to be a source
of biologically-produced ozone: this reaction proceeds through an unusual compound dihydrogen trioxide, also known as trioxidane,
(HOOOH) which is an antibody-catalyzed product of singlet oxygen and
water. This compound in turn disproportionates to ozone and peroxide,
providing two powerful antibacterials. The body's range of defense
against all of these active oxidizing agents is hardly surprising,
then, given their "deliberate" employment as antimicrobial agents in
the immune response.[9]
Oxygen derivatives are prone to form free radicals, especially in metabolic processes. Because they can cause severe damage to cells and their DNA before they are dealt with, they form part of many theories of carcinogenesis and aging.
Combustion hazard
Highly concentrated sources of oxygen promote rapid combustion and therefore are fire and explosion hazards in the presence of fuels. However, the oxygen itself is not the fuel, it just allows combustion. The fire that killed the Apollo 1
crew on a test launchpad spread so rapidly because the capsule was
pressurized with pure oxygen as would be usual in an actual flight, but
to maintain positive pressure in the capsule, this was at slightly more
than atmospheric pressure instead of the ⅓ normal pressure that would
be used in flight. (See partial pressure.)
Similar hazards also apply to compounds of oxygen with a high oxidative potential, such as high concentration peroxides, chlorates, perchlorates, and dichromates; they also can often cause chemical burns.
See also
References
- ^ http://www.nature.com/news/2001/011122/pf/011122-3_pf.html
- ^ F. Cacace, G. de Petris, A. Troiani, (2001). "Experimental Detection of Tetraoxygen". Angewandte Chemie International Edition 40 (21): 4062 - 4065. DOI:<4062::AID-ANIE4062>3.0.CO;2-X 10.1002/1521-3773(20011105)40:21<4062::AID-ANIE4062>3.0.CO;2-X.
- ^ H. Guerlac (1954). "The Poets' Nitre". Isis 45 (3): 243-255.
- ^ Data from the World Ocean Atlas 2001.
- ^ Balachandran, S. C. (October 9-11, 1995). "Carbon and Oxygen Nucleosynthesis in the Galaxy: Problems and Prospects". Proceedings of the sixth (6th) annual October Astrophysics Conference, 188-195, College Park; Maryland: Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Retrieved on 2007-01-08.
- ^ Los Alamos National Laboratory – Oxygen
- ^ From The
Chemistry and Fertility of Sea Waters by H.W. Harvey, 1955, citing
C.J.J. Fox, "On the coefficients of absorption of atmospheric gases in
sea water", Publ. Circ. Cons. Explor. Mer, no. 41, 1907. Harvey however
notes that according to later articles in Nature the values appear to
be about 3% too high.
- ^ http://www.astronautix.com/craftfam/spasuits.htm
- ^ http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/29647?&print=yes
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Oxygen"
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