•Name: Oxygen
•Symbol: O
•Atomic number: 8
•Atomic weight: 15.9994
•Standard state: gas at 298 K
•CAS Registry ID: 7782-44-7
•Group in periodic table: 16
•Group name: Chalcogen
•Period in periodic table: 2
•Block in periodic table: p-block
•Color: colorless as a gas, liquid is pale blue
•Classification: Non-metallic
•Symbol: O
•Atomic number: 8
•Atomic weight: 15.9994
•Standard state: gas at 298 K
•CAS Registry ID: 7782-44-7
•Group in periodic table: 16
•Group name: Chalcogen
•Period in periodic table: 2
•Block in periodic table: p-block
•Color: colorless as a gas, liquid is pale blue
•Classification: Non-metallic
Ozone (O3) is another allotrope [allotropy: the property of
some chemical elements to exist in two or more different forms] of oxygen. It
is formed from electrical discharges or ultraviolet light acting on O2. It is
an important component of the atmosphere (in total amounting to the equivalent
of a layer about 3 mm thick at ordinary pressures and temperatures) which is
vital in preventing harmful ultraviolet rays of the sun from reaching the
earth's surface. Aerosols in the atmosphere have a detrimental effect on the
ozone layer. Large holes in the ozone layer are forming over the polar regions
and these are increasing in size annually. Paradoxically, ozone is toxic!
Undiluted ozone is bluish in colour. Liquid ozone is bluish-black, and solid
ozone is violet-black.
Oxygen is very reactive and oxides of most elements are
known. It is essential for respiration of all plants and animals and for most
types of combustion.
Historical information
Oxygen was discovered by Joseph Priestley, Carl Scheele at
1774 in England, Sweden. Origin of name: from the Greek words "oxy
genes" meaning "acid" (sharp) and "forming" (acid
former).Leonardo da Vinci suggested that air consists of at least two different
gases. Before then, air was felt to be an element in its own right. He was also
aware that one of these gases supported both flames and life. Oxygen was
prepared by several workers before 1772 but these workers did not recognise it
as an element. Joseph Priestley is generally credited with its discovery (who
made oxygen by heating lead or mercury oxides), but Carl Wilhelm Scheele also
reported it independently.
The behavior of oxygen and nitrogen as components of air led
to the advancement of the phlogiston theory of combustion, which influenced
chemists for a century or so, and which delayed an understanding of the nature
of air for many years.
Sometime prior to the autumn of 1803, the Englishman John
Dalton was able to explain the results of some of his studies by assuming that
matter is composed of atoms and that all samples of any given compound consist
of the same combination of these atoms. Dalton also noted that in series of
compounds, the ratios of the masses of the second element that combine with a
given weight of the first element can be reduced to small whole numbers (the
law of multiple proportions). This was further evidence for atoms. Dalton's
theory of atoms was published by Thomas Thomson in the 3rd edition of his
System of Chemistry in 1807 and in a paper about strontium oxalates published
in the Philosophical Transactions. Dalton published these ideas himself in the
following year in the New System of Chemical Philosophy.
Physical properties
•Melting point: 54.8 [or -218.3 °C (-360.9 °F)] K
•Boiling point: 90.2 [or -182.9 °C (-297.2 °F)] K
•Density of solid: 1495 kg m-3
•Boiling point: 90.2 [or -182.9 °C (-297.2 °F)] K
•Density of solid: 1495 kg m-3
Orbital properties
•Ground state electron configuration: [He].2s2.2p4
•Shell structure: 2.6
•Term symbol: 3P2
•Shell structure: 2.6
•Term symbol: 3P2
Isolation
There is not normally any need to make oxygen in the
laboratory as it is readily available commercially or through in-house air
liquefaction plants. However the decomposition of potassium chlorate is one
route to O2 and decomposition of potassium permanganate is another. In
addition, electrolysis of KOH using nickel electrodes gives clean oxygen.
2KClO3 (400°C) → 2KCl + 3O2
2KMnO4 (214°C) → K2MnO4 + MnO2 + O2
Ozone (O3) is made by silent electric discharge through
oxygen flowing through a cooled system. This can give up to a10% proportion of
ozone and the ozone is purified by fractional liquefaction (with care!).
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