Oxygen - Element information, properties and uses (2024)

Transcript :

Chemistry in its element: oxygen

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You're listening to Chemistry in its element brought to you by Chemistry World, the magazine of the Royal Society of Chemistry.

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Chris Smith

Hello! And welcome to Chemistry in its element, where we take a look at the stories behind the elements that make up the world around us. I'm Chris Smith. This week, we are continuing our tour of the periodic table with a lung full of a gas that we can't do without. It protects us from solar radiation, it keeps us alive and by helping things to burn, it also keeps us warm. It is of course oxygen. And to tell its story, here's Mark Peplow.

Mark Peplow

Little did those humble cyanobacteria realize what they were doing when two and a half billion years ago, they started to build up their own reserves of energy-rich chemicals, by combining water and carbon dioxide. Powered by sunlight, they spent the next two billion years terraforming our entire planet with the waste products of their photosynthesis, a rather toxic gas called oxygen. In fact, those industrious bugs are ultimately responsible for the diversity of life, we see around us today.

Oxygen accounts for about 23% of the atmosphere's mass with pairs of oxygen atoms stuck together to make dioxygen molecules, but it's not just in the air, we breathe. Overall, it's the most abundant element on the earth's surface and the third most abundant in the universe after hydrogen and helium. Our planet's rocks are about 46% oxygen by weight, much of it in the form of silicon dioxide, which we know most commonly as sand. And many of the metals we mine from the Earth's crust are also found as their oxides, aluminium in bauxite or iron in hematite, while carbonates such as limestone are also largely made of oxygen and the oceans are of course about 86% oxygen, connected to hydrogen as good old H2O, just about the most perfect solvent you can imagine for biochemistry.

Oxygen is also in virtually every molecule in your body including fats, carbohydrates and DNA. In particular, it's the atom that links together the phosphate groups in the energy-carrying molecule ATP. Oxygen is obviously pretty useful for keeping us going, but is also widely used in industry as an oxidant, where it can give up some of that solar energy captured by plant and those cyanobacteria. A stream of oxygen can push the temperature of a blast furnace over 2000 degrees and it allows an oxyacetylene torch to cut straight through metal. The space shuttle is carried into space on an incredible force produced when liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen combine to make water.

So who first noticed this ubiquitous stuff? There's certainly some debate about who first identified oxygen as an element, partly because at the time the precise definition of an element still hadn't really been pinned down. English chemist, Joseph Priestley certainly isolated oxygen gas in the 1770s, although he tried to define it as dephlogisticated air. Phlogiston was then thought to be some kind of primordial substance that was the root cause of combustion. Swedish chemist, Carl Wilhelm Scheele was a fan of phlogiston too and probably discovered oxygen before Priestly did. But it was Antoine Lavoisier, sometimes called the father of modern chemistry, who was the first to truly identify oxygen as an element and in doing so, he really helped to firm up the definition that an element is something that cannot be broken down by any kind of chemical analysis. This also helped him to kill off the phlogiston theory, which was a crucial step in the evolution of chemistry.

Oxygen isn't only about the dioxygen molecules that sustain us. There is another form, trioxygen, also known as ozone and it's also pretty important in the upper reaches of the atmosphere, is responsible for filtering out harmful ultraviolet rays, but unfortunately, ozone is also pretty toxic. So it's bad news that tons of the gas are produced by the reactions between hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides churned out by cars every day. If only we could transplant the stuff, straight up into the stratosphere! Now ozone is normally spread so thinly in the air, that you can't see its pale blue colour and oxygen gas is colourless unless you liquefy it, but there is one place where you can see the gas in all its glory. The aurora or polar lights, where particles from the solar wind slam into oxygen molecules in the upper atmosphere to produce the swirling green and red colours that have entranced humans for millennia.

Chris Smith

So why life is a gas, that was Mark Peplow revealing the secrets of the element that we can't live without. Next time on Chemistry in its element, Johnny Ball joins us to tell the story of a chemical that's craved by Olympic athletes, makes good hi-five connectors and is also a favourite for fillings. And that's in teeth, not pies.

Johnny Ball

Today one gram can be beaten into a square meter sheet just 230 atoms thick, one cubic centimetre would make a sheet 18 square meters, 1 gram could be drawn out to make 165 meters of wire just 1/200th of a millimetre thick. The gold colour in Buckingham Palace fence is actually gold; gold covered because it lasts 30 years; whereas gold paint which actually contains no gold at all lasts in tip-top condition only a year or so.

Chris Smith

So all that glitters isn't gold, but some is, and you can find out why on next week's Chemistry in its element. I'm Chris Smith, thanks for listening. See you next time.

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Chemistry in its element is brought to you by the Royal Society of Chemistry and produced bythenakedscientists.com. There's more information and other episodes of Chemistry in its element on our website atchemistryworld.org/elements.

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Oxygen
    - Element information, properties and uses (2024)

FAQs

Oxygen - Element information, properties and uses? ›

A colourless, odourless gas. The greatest commercial use of oxygen gas is in the steel industry. Large quantities are also used in the manufacture of a wide range of chemicals including nitric acid and hydrogen peroxide.

What are the uses and properties of oxygen? ›

The main applications of oxygen in order of importance are: 1) melting, refining and manufacture of steel and other metals; 2) manufacture of chemicals by controlled oxidation; 3) rocket propulsion; 4) medical and biological life support; 5) mining, production and manufacture of stone and glass products.

What are 3 important uses of oxygen? ›

Some important uses of oxygen are as follows:
  • Oxygen is used up by living beings in respiration process. ( 1 Mark)
  • It is used for burning of fuels. ( 1 Mark)
  • In industry it is used for cutting, welding and melting metals. ( 1 Mark)
  • It is used in water treatment and chemical combustion. (1 Mark)
Jul 3, 2022

What is the most important property of oxygen? ›

Key Properties

It is highly reactive and form oxides with almost all elements except noble gases. Liquid oxygen is strongly paramagnetic. It exists in three allotropic forms- monoatomic, diatomic and triatomic. It supports combustion.

What are the 3 properties of the oxygen family? ›

This group contains non-metals and metalloids. Each element in this group has six valence electrons and have small atomic radii and large ionic radii. Many of these elements at high concentrations are toxic or damaging.

What are the uses and facts about oxygen? ›

Oxygen gas is used for oxy-acetylene welding and cutting of metals. A growing use is in the treatment of sewage and of effluent from industry. Oxygen first appeared in the Earth's atmosphere around 2 billion years ago, accumulating from the photosynthesis of blue-green algae.

What are 10 uses of oxygen? ›

Common uses of oxygen include production of steel, plastics and textiles, brazing, welding and cutting of steels and other metals, rocket propellant, oxygen therapy, and life support systems in aircraft, submarines, spaceflight and diving.

Why is oxygen an important element? ›

Oxygen plays a critical role in respiration, the energy-producing chemistry that drives the metabolisms of most living things. We humans, along with many other creatures, need oxygen in the air we breathe to stay alive.

Why is oxygen so useful? ›

Oxygen helps organisms grow, reproduce, and turn food into energy. Humans get the oxygen they need by breathing through their nose and mouth into their lungs. Oxygen gives our cells the ability to break down food in order to get the energy we need to survive.

What type of element is oxygen? ›

Oxygen is a chemical element with symbol O and atomic number 8. Classified as a nonmetal, Oxygen is a gas at room temperature.

What is a property or fact about oxygen? ›

Oxygen supports combustion and is required for fire, but itself does not burn and is not flammable. Liquid oxygen is pale blue in colour and magnetic. Oxygen dissolves in water. Fresh water contains about 6.04 mL of oxygen per litre, whereas seawater contains approximately 4.95 mL of oxygen per litre.

What is pure oxygen used for? ›

While humans need oxygen to sustain life, pure oxygen is highly reactive. It is widely used in medical treatments and in industrial processes and must be handled with care. It needs very little energy to cause a reaction.

Where is oxygen mainly found? ›

Oxygen makes up a large part of the world we live in, both the ground and sky. Oxygen makes up 46% of the Earth's crust, largely as silicates, compounds of oxygen and silicon. Oxygen also comprises around 21% of the atmosphere as molecular oxygen and ozone.

What is the most poisonous element? ›

One gram of polonium emits as many alpha particles as five kilograms of radium. The element is 250-thousand times more toxic than cyanide. So, one gram of Po-210, if ingested or injected, could kill 10 million people. Former spy Alexander Litvinenko was poisoned with a trace of polonium in his tea.

Which element is most like oxygen? ›

The element most similar to oxygen in terms of its chemical properties is Sulfur (S). This is because they belong to the same group in the periodic table, which is Group 16 or the oxygen group.

What are 6 properties of oxygen? ›

Physical properties of oxygen
  • Oxygen is a colorless gas.
  • It is an odorless gas.
  • Oxygen does not have any taste.
  • Oxygen has a higher density than air.
  • Oxygen is a very poor conductor of heat and electricity.
  • Oxygen is soluble in some liquids such as water, alcohol, etc. (solutes slightly).

What are 3 medical uses of oxygen? ›

Healthcare professionals use oxygen to treat respiratory illnesses like COVID-19 and pneumonia. Oxygen is also essential for surgery and trauma. Vulnerable groups like the elderly, pregnant women and newborns need oxygen in regular basis.

What is oxygen used for in the body? ›

All the systems in our body rely on oxygen to make energy. If our blood didn't move the oxygen we breathe into our organs and tissues, we wouldn't be able to carry out normal functions such as moving our muscles, digesting food or thinking. Blood keeps us alive.

Is oxygen flammable? ›

Oxygen is not flammable, but it can cause other materials that burn to ignite more easily and to burn far more rapidly. The result is that a fire involving oxygen can appear explosive-like.

What is oxygen made of? ›

What is oxygen made of? Oxygen is an element made up of 8 protons, 8 neutrons, and 8 electrons. Out of 8 electrons, 6 of them are in its outermost shell.

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