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  2. Ozone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozone

    Then, the oxygen from the first step is an intermediate because it participates as a reactant in the second step, which is a bimolecular reaction because there are two different reactants (ozone and oxygen) that give rise to one product, that corresponds to molecular oxygen in the gas phase.

  3. Allotropes of oxygen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allotropes_of_oxygen

    Triatomic oxygen (ozone, O 3) is a very reactive allotrope of oxygen that is a pale blue gas at standard temperature and pressure. Liquid and solid O 3 have a deeper blue color than ordinary O 2, and they are unstable and explosive. [5] [6] In its gas phase, ozone is destructive to materials like rubber and fabric and is damaging to lung tissue ...

  4. Triatomic molecule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triatomic_molecule

    Homonuclear triatomic molecules contain three of the same kind of atom. That molecule will be an allotrope of that element. Ozone, O 3 is an example of a triatomic molecule with all atoms the same. Triatomic hydrogen, H 3, is unstable and breaks up spontaneously. H 3 +, the trihydrogen cation is stable by itself and is symmetric.

  5. Ozone–oxygen cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozone–oxygen_cycle

    If an oxygen atom and an ozone molecule meet, they recombine to form two oxygen molecules: 4. ozone conversion: O 3 + O → 2 O 2. Two oxygen atoms may react to form one oxygen molecule: 5. oxygen recombination: 2O + A → O 2 + A as in reaction 2 (above), A denotes another molecule or atom, like N 2 or O 2 required for the conservation of ...

  6. Trioxidane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trioxidane

    The oxygenoxygen bond lengths of 142.8 picometer are slightly shorter than the 146.4 pm oxygenoxygen bonds in hydrogen peroxide. [7] Various dimeric and trimeric forms also seem to exist. There is a trend of increasing gas-phase acidity and corresponding p K a as the number of oxygen atoms in the chain increases in HO n H structures ( n ...

  7. Ground-level ozone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground-level_ozone

    Ground-level ozone (O 3), also known as surface-level ozone and tropospheric ozone, is a trace gas in the troposphere (the lowest level of the Earth's atmosphere), with an average concentration of 20–30 parts per billion by volume (ppbv), with close to 100 ppbv in polluted areas.

  8. Photodissociation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photodissociation

    The formation of the ozone layer is also caused by photodissociation. Ozone in the Earth's stratosphere is created by ultraviolet light striking oxygen molecules containing two oxygen atoms (O 2), splitting them into individual oxygen atoms (atomic oxygen). The atomic oxygen then combines with unbroken O 2 to create ozone, O 3. [17]

  9. Ozone layer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozone_layer

    Ozone-oxygen cycle in the ozone layer. The Earth's ozone layer formed about 500 million years ago, when the neoproterozoic oxygenation event brought the fraction of oxygen in the atmosphere to about 20%. [7] The photochemical mechanisms that give rise to the ozone layer were discovered by the British physicist Sydney Chapman in 1930.