Oxygen, symbol O, colorless, odorless, tasteless,
slightly magnetic gaseous element. On earth, oxygen is more abundant
than any other element. Oxygen was discovered in 1774 by the British
chemist Joseph Priestley and, independently, by the Swedish chemist
Carl Wilhelm Scheele; it was shown to be an elemental gas by the
French chemist Antoine Laurent Lavoisier in his classic experiments
on combustion.
Properties and Occurrence
Gaseous oxygen can be condensed to a pale blue liquid that is
strongly magnetic. Pale blue solid oxygen is produced by compressing
the liquid. The atomic weight of oxygen is 15.9994; at atmospheric
pressure, the element boils at -182.96° C (-297.33° F),
melts at -218.4° C (-361.1° F), and has a density of 1.429
g/liter at 0° C (32° F).
Oxygen composes 21 percent by volume or 23.15
percent by weight of the atmosphere; 85.8 percent by weight of
the oceans (88.8 percent of pure water is oxygen); and, as a constituent
of most rocks and minerals, 46.7 percent by weight of the solid
crust of the earth. Oxygen comprises 60 percent of the human body.
It is a constituent of all living tissues; almost all plants and
animals, including all humans, require oxygen, in the free or
combined state, to maintain life.
Three structural forms of oxygen are known:
ordinary oxygen, containing two atoms per molecule, formula O2;
ozone, containing three atoms per molecule, formula O3; and a
pale blue, nonmagnetic form, O4, containing four atoms per molecule,
which readily breaks down into ordinary oxygen. Three stable isotopes
of oxygen are known; oxygen-16 (atomic mass 16) is the most abundant.
It comprises 99.76 percent of ordinary oxygen and was used in
determination of atomic weights until the 1960s .
Oxygen is prepared in the laboratory from
salts such as potassium chlorate, barium peroxide, and sodium
peroxide. The most important industrial methods for the preparation
of oxygen are the electrolysis of water and the fractional distillation
of liquid air. In the latter method, air is liquefied and allowed
to evaporate. The nitrogen in the liquid air is more volatile
and boils off first, leaving the oxygen. Oxygen is stored and
shipped in either liquid or gaseous form.
Oxygen is a component of many organic and
inorganic compounds. It forms compounds called oxides with almost
all the elements, including some of the noble gases. A chemical
reaction in which an oxide forms is called oxidation. The rate
of the reaction varies with different elements. Ordinary combustion,
or burning, is a very rapid form of oxidation. In spontaneous
combustion, the heat evolved by the oxidation reaction is sufficiently
great to raise the temperature of the substance to the point that
flames result. For example, phosphorus combines so vigorously
with oxygen that the heat liberated in the reaction causes the
phosphorus to melt and burn. Certain very finely divided powders
present so much surface area to the air that they burst into flame
by spontaneous combustion; they are called pyrophoric substances.
Sulfur, hydrogen, sodium, and magnesium combine with oxygen less
energetically and burn only after ignition. Some elements, such
as copper and mercury, form oxides slowly, even when heated. Inactive
metals, such as platinum, iridium, and gold, form oxides only
through indirect methods. For discussion of oxides of elements
see separate articles on each element.
Uses
Large amounts of oxygen are used in high-temperature welding torches,
in which a mixture of oxygen and another gas produces a flame
of much higher temperature than is obtained by burning gases in
air. Oxygen is administered to patients whose breathing is impaired
and also to people in aircraft flying at high altitudes, where
the poor oxygen concentration cannot support normal respiration.
Oxygen-enriched air is used in open-hearth furnaces for steel
manufacture.
Most of the oxygen produced in the United
States is used to make a mixture of carbon monoxide and hydrogen
called synthesis gas, used for the synthesis of methanol and ammonia.
High-purity oxygen is used also in the metal-fabrication industries;
in liquid form it is of great importance as a propellant for guided
missiles and rockets.
Jepsen Maintenance
makes no warranty or representation regarding the truthfulness
or completeness of any information contained in any hyperlink
site herein Jepsen Maintenances, has not verified the above infomation.
All contents of this site for imformational purposes only.