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Wikipedia

Ozone

Ozone (/ˈzn/) (or trioxygen) is an inorganic molecule with the chemical formula O
3
. It is a pale blue gas with a distinctively pungent smell. It is an allotrope of oxygen that is much less stable than the diatomic allotrope O
2
, breaking down in the lower atmosphere to O
2
(dioxygen). Ozone is formed from dioxygen by the action of ultraviolet (UV) light and electrical discharges within the Earth's atmosphere. It is present in very low concentrations throughout the atmosphere, with its highest concentration high in the ozone layer of the stratosphere, which absorbs most of the Sun's ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

Ozone
Ball and stick model of ozone
Spacefill model of ozone
Names
IUPAC name
Ozone
Systematic IUPAC name
Trioxygen
Other names
4-trioxidiene; catena-trioxygen
Identifiers
  • 10028-15-6 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:25812 Y
ChemSpider
  • 23208 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.030.051
EC Number
  • 233–069–2
1101
  • 6297
MeSH Ozone
  • 24823
RTECS number
  • RS8225000
UNII
  • 66H7ZZK23N Y
  • DTXSID0021098
  • InChI=1S/O3/c1-3-2 Y
    Key: CBENFWSGALASAD-UHFFFAOYSA-N Y
  • InChI=1/O3/c1-3-2
    Key: CBENFWSGALASAD-UHFFFAOYAY
  • [O-][O+]=O
Properties
O3
Molar mass 47.997 g·mol−1
Appearance Colourless to pale blue gas[1]
Odor Pungent[1]
Density 2.144 g/L (at 0 °C)
Melting point −192.2 °C; −313.9 °F; 81.0 K
Boiling point −112 °C; −170 °F; 161 K
1.05 g L−1 (at 0 °C)
Solubility in other solvents Very soluble in CCl4, sulfuric acid
Vapor pressure 55.7 atm[2] (−12.15 °C or 10.13 °F or 261.00 K)[a]
Conjugate acid Protonated ozone
+6.7·10−6 cm3/mol
1.2226 (liquid), 1.00052 (gas, STP, 546 nm—note high dispersion)[3]
Structure
C2v
Digonal
Dihedral
Hybridisation sp2 for O1
0.53 D
Thermochemistry
238.92 J K−1 mol−1
142.67 kJ mol−1
Hazards
GHS labelling:
Danger
H270, H314
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Lethal dose or concentration (LD, LC):
12.6 ppm (mouse, 3 hr)
50 ppm (human, 30 min)
36 ppm (rabbit, 3 hr)
21 ppm (mouse, 3 hr)
21.8 ppm (rat, 3 hr)
24.8 ppm (guinea pig, 3 hr)
4.8 ppm (rat, 4 hr)[4]
NIOSH (US health exposure limits):
PEL (Permissible)
TWA 0.1 ppm (0.2 mg/m3)[1]
REL (Recommended)
C 0.1 ppm (0.2 mg/m3)[1]
IDLH (Immediate danger)
5 ppm[1]
Related compounds
Related compounds
Sulfur dioxide
Trisulfur
Disulfur monoxide
Cyclic ozone
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Y verify (what is YN ?)

Ozone's odor is reminiscent of chlorine, and detectable by many people at concentrations of as little as 0.1 ppm in air. Ozone's O3 structure was determined in 1865. The molecule was later proven to have a bent structure and to be weakly diamagnetic. In standard conditions, ozone is a pale blue gas that condenses at cryogenic temperatures to a dark blue liquid and finally a violet-black solid. Ozone's instability with regard to more common dioxygen is such that both concentrated gas and liquid ozone may decompose explosively at elevated temperatures, physical shock, or fast warming to the boiling point.[5][6] It is therefore used commercially only in low concentrations.

Ozone is a powerful oxidant (far more so than dioxygen) and has many industrial and consumer applications related to oxidation. This same high oxidizing potential, however, causes ozone to damage mucous and respiratory tissues in animals, and also tissues in plants, above concentrations of about 0.1 ppm. While this makes ozone a potent respiratory hazard and pollutant near ground level, a higher concentration in the ozone layer (from two to eight ppm) is beneficial, preventing damaging UV light from reaching the Earth's surface.

Nomenclature edit

The trivial name ozone is the most commonly used and preferred IUPAC name. The systematic names 4-trioxidiene[dubious ] and catena-trioxygen, valid IUPAC names, are constructed according to the substitutive and additive nomenclatures, respectively. The name ozone derives from ozein (ὄζειν), the Greek neuter present participle for smell,[7] referring to ozone's distinctive smell.

In appropriate contexts, ozone can be viewed as trioxidane with two hydrogen atoms removed, and as such, trioxidanylidene may be used as a systematic name, according to substitutive nomenclature. By default, these names pay no regard to the radicality of the ozone molecule. In an even more specific context, this can also name the non-radical singlet ground state, whereas the diradical state is named trioxidanediyl.

Trioxidanediyl (or ozonide) is used, non-systematically, to refer to the substituent group (-OOO-). Care should be taken to avoid confusing the name of the group for the context-specific name for the ozone given above.

History edit

 
Christian Friedrich Schönbein (18 October 1799 – 29 August 1868)
 
A prototype ozonometer built by John Smyth in 1865

In 1785, Dutch chemist Martinus van Marum was conducting experiments involving electrical sparking above water when he noticed an unusual smell, which he attributed to the electrical reactions, failing to realize that he had in fact created ozone.[8][9]

A half century later, Christian Friedrich Schönbein noticed the same pungent odour and recognized it as the smell often following a bolt of lightning. In 1839, he succeeded in isolating the gaseous chemical and named it "ozone", from the Greek word ozein (ὄζειν) meaning "to smell".[10][11] For this reason, Schönbein is generally credited with the discovery of ozone.[12][13][14][8] He also noted the similarity of ozone smell to the smell of phosphorus, and in 1844 proved that the product of reaction of white phosphorus with air is identical.[10] A subsequent effort to call ozone "electrified oxygen" he ridiculed by proposing to call the ozone from white phosphorus "phosphorized oxygen".[10] The formula for ozone, O3, was not determined until 1865 by Jacques-Louis Soret[15] and confirmed by Schönbein in 1867.[10][16]

For much of the second half of the 19th century and well into the 20th, ozone was considered a healthy component of the environment by naturalists and health-seekers. Beaumont, California, had as its official slogan "Beaumont: Zone of Ozone", as evidenced on postcards and Chamber of Commerce letterhead.[17] Naturalists working outdoors often considered the higher elevations beneficial because of their ozone content. "There is quite a different atmosphere [at higher elevation] with enough ozone to sustain the necessary energy [to work]", wrote naturalist Henry Henshaw, working in Hawaii.[18] Seaside air was considered to be healthy because of its believed ozone content. The smell giving rise to this belief is in fact that of halogenated seaweed metabolites[19] and dimethyl sulfide.[20]

Much of ozone's appeal seems to have resulted from its "fresh" smell, which evoked associations with purifying properties. Scientists noted its harmful effects. In 1873 James Dewar and John Gray McKendrick documented that frogs grew sluggish, birds gasped for breath, and rabbits' blood showed decreased levels of oxygen after exposure to "ozonized air", which "exercised a destructive action".[21][12] Schönbein himself reported that chest pains, irritation of the mucous membranes and difficulty breathing occurred as a result of inhaling ozone, and small mammals died.[22] In 1911, Leonard Hill and Martin Flack stated in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B that ozone's healthful effects "have, by mere iteration, become part and parcel of common belief; and yet exact physiological evidence in favour of its good effects has been hitherto almost entirely wanting ... The only thoroughly well-ascertained knowledge concerning the physiological effect of ozone, so far attained, is that it causes irritation and œdema of the lungs, and death if inhaled in relatively strong concentration for any time."[12][23]

During World War I, ozone was tested at Queen Alexandra Military Hospital in London as a possible disinfectant for wounds. The gas was applied directly to wounds for as long as 15 minutes. This resulted in damage to both bacterial cells and human tissue. Other sanitizing techniques, such as irrigation with antiseptics, were found preferable.[12][24]

Until the 1920s, it was not certain whether small amounts of oxozone, O
4
, were also present in ozone samples due to the difficulty of applying analytical chemistry techniques to the explosive concentrated chemical.[25][26] In 1923, Georg-Maria Schwab (working for his doctoral thesis under Ernst Hermann Riesenfeld) was the first to successfully solidify ozone and perform accurate analysis which conclusively refuted the oxozone hypothesis.[25][26] Further hitherto unmeasured physical properties of pure concentrated ozone were determined by the Riesenfeld group in the 1920s.[25]

Physical properties edit

 
Liquid ozone

Ozone is a colourless or pale blue gas, slightly soluble in water and much more soluble in inert non-polar solvents such as carbon tetrachloride or fluorocarbons, in which it forms a blue solution. At 161 K (−112 °C; −170 °F), it condenses to form a dark blue liquid. It is dangerous to allow this liquid to warm to its boiling point, because both concentrated gaseous ozone and liquid ozone can detonate. At temperatures below 80 K (−193.2 °C; −315.7 °F), it forms a violet-black solid.[27]

Most people can detect about 0.01 μmol/mol of ozone in air where it has a very specific sharp odour somewhat resembling chlorine bleach. Exposure of 0.1 to 1 μmol/mol produces headaches, burning eyes and irritation to the respiratory passages.[28] Even low concentrations of ozone in air are very destructive to organic materials such as latex, plastics and animal lung tissue.

Ozone is weakly diamagnetic.[29]

Structure edit

According to experimental evidence from microwave spectroscopy, ozone is a bent molecule, with C2v symmetry (similar to the water molecule).[30] The O–O distances are 127.2 pm (1.272 Å). The O–O–O angle is 116.78°.[31] The central atom is sp² hybridized with one lone pair. Ozone is a polar molecule with a dipole moment of 0.53 D.[32] The molecule can be represented as a resonance hybrid with two contributing structures, each with a single bond on one side and double bond on the other. The arrangement possesses an overall bond order of 1.5 for both sides. It is isoelectronic with the nitrite anion. Naturally occurring ozone can be composed of substituted isotopes (16O, 17O, 18O). A cyclic form has been predicted but not observed.

 
Resonance Lewis structures of the ozone molecule

Reactions edit

Ozone is among the most powerful oxidizing agents known, far stronger than O2. It is also unstable at high concentrations, decaying into ordinary diatomic oxygen. Its half-life varies with atmospheric conditions such as temperature, humidity, and air movement. Under laboratory conditions, the half-life will average ~1500 minutes (25 hours) in still air at room temperature (24 °C), zero humidity with zero air changes per hour.[33]

 

This reaction proceeds more rapidly with increasing temperature. Deflagration of ozone can be triggered by a spark and can occur in ozone concentrations of 10 wt% or higher.[34]

Ozone can also be produced from oxygen at the anode of an electrochemical cell. This reaction can create smaller quantities of ozone for research purposes.[35]

 [36]

This can be observed as an unwanted reaction in a Hoffman gas apparatus during the electrolysis of water when the voltage is set above the necessary voltage.

With metals edit

Ozone will oxidize most metals (except gold, platinum, and iridium) to oxides of the metals in their highest oxidation state. For example:

 

With nitrogen and carbon compounds edit

Ozone also oxidizes nitric oxide to nitrogen dioxide:

 

This reaction is accompanied by chemiluminescence. The NO2 can be further oxidized to nitrate radical:

 

The NO3 formed can react with NO2 to form dinitrogen pentoxide (N2O5).

Solid nitronium perchlorate can be made from NO2, ClO2, and O3 gases:

 

Ozone does not react with ammonium salts, but it oxidizes ammonia to ammonium nitrate:

 

Ozone reacts with carbon to form carbon dioxide, even at room temperature:

 

With sulfur compounds edit

Ozone oxidizes sulfides to sulfates. For example, lead(II) sulfide is oxidized to lead(II) sulfate:

 

Sulfuric acid can be produced from ozone, water and either elemental sulfur or sulfur dioxide:

 

In the gas phase, ozone reacts with hydrogen sulfide to form sulfur dioxide:

 

In an aqueous solution, however, two competing simultaneous reactions occur, one to produce elemental sulfur, and one to produce sulfuric acid:

 

With alkenes and alkynes edit

Alkenes can be oxidatively cleaved by ozone, in a process called ozonolysis, giving alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids, depending on the second step of the workup.

 
General reaction equation of ozonolysis

Ozone can also cleave alkynes to form an acid anhydride or diketone product.[37] If the reaction is performed in the presence of water, the anhydride hydrolyzes to give two carboxylic acids.

 

Usually ozonolysis is carried out in a solution of dichloromethane, at a temperature of −78 °C. After a sequence of cleavage and rearrangement, an organic ozonide is formed. With reductive workup (e.g. zinc in acetic acid or dimethyl sulfide), ketones and aldehydes will be formed, with oxidative workup (e.g. aqueous or alcoholic hydrogen peroxide), carboxylic acids will be formed.[38]

Other substrates edit

All three atoms of ozone may also react, as in the reaction of tin(II) chloride with hydrochloric acid and ozone:

 

Iodine perchlorate can be made by treating iodine dissolved in cold anhydrous perchloric acid with ozone:

 

Ozone could also react with potassium iodide to give oxygen and iodine gas that can be titrated for quantitative determination:[39]

 

Combustion edit

Ozone can be used for combustion reactions and combustible gases; ozone provides higher temperatures than burning in dioxygen (O2). The following is a reaction for the combustion of carbon subnitride which can also cause higher temperatures:

 

Ozone can react at cryogenic temperatures. At 77 K (−196.2 °C; −321.1 °F), atomic hydrogen reacts with liquid ozone to form a hydrogen superoxide radical, which dimerizes:[40]

 

Ozone decomposition edit

Types of ozone decomposition edit

Ozone is a toxic substance,[41][42] commonly found or generated in human environments (aircraft cabins, offices with photocopiers, laser printers, sterilizers...) and its catalytic decomposition is very important to reduce pollution. This type of decomposition is the most widely used, especially with solid catalysts, and it has many advantages such as a higher conversion with a lower temperature. Furthermore, the product and the catalyst can be instantaneously separated, and this way the catalyst can be easily recovered without using any separation operation. Moreover, the most used materials in the catalytic decomposition of ozone in the gas phase are noble metals like Pt, Rh or Pd and transition metals such as Mn, Co, Cu, Fe, Ni or Ag.

There are two other possibilities for the ozone decomposition in gas phase:

The first one is a thermal decomposition where the ozone can be decomposed using only the action of heat. The problem is that this type of decomposition is very slow with temperatures below 250 °C. However, the decomposition rate can be increased working with higher temperatures but this would involve a high energy cost.

The second one is a photochemical decomposition, which consists of radiating ozone with ultraviolet radiation (UV) and it gives rise to oxygen and radical peroxide.[43]

Kinetics of ozone decomposition into molecular oxygen edit

The process of ozone decomposition is a complex reaction involving two elementary reactions that finally lead to molecular oxygen, and this means that the reaction order and the rate law cannot be determined by the stoichiometry of the fitted equation.

Overall reaction:  

Rate law (observed):  

It has been determined that the ozone decomposition follows a first order kinetics, and from the rate law above it can be determined that the partial order respect to molecular oxygen is -1 and respect to ozone is 2, therefore the global reaction order is 1.

The ozone decomposition consists of two elementary steps: The first one corresponds to a unimolecular reaction because one only molecule of ozone decomposes into two products (molecular oxygen and oxygen). 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.

Step 1: Unimolecular reaction     

Step 2: Bimolecular reaction      

These two steps have different reaction rates, the first one is reversible and faster than the second reaction, which is slower, so this means that the determining step is the second reaction and this is used to determine the observed reaction rate. The reaction rate laws for every step are the ones that follow:

 

The following mechanism allows to explain the rate law of the ozone decomposition observed experimentally, and also it allows to determine the reaction orders with respect to ozone and oxygen, with which the overall reaction order will be determined. The slower step, the bimolecular reaction, is the one that determines the rate of product formation, and considering that this step gives rise to two oxygen molecules the rate law has this form:

 

However, this equation depends on the concentration of oxygen (intermediate), which can be determined considering the first step. Since the first step is faster and reversible and the second step is slower, the reactants and products from the first step are in equilibrium, so the concentration of the intermediate can be determined as follows:

 
 

Then using these equations, the formation rate of molecular oxygen is as shown below:

 

Finally, the mechanism presented allows to establish the rate observed experimentally, with a rate constant (Kobs) and corresponding to a first order kinetics, as follows:[44]

 

where  

Reduction to ozonides edit

Reduction of ozone gives the ozonide anion, O3. Derivatives of this anion are explosive and must be stored at cryogenic temperatures. Ozonides for all the alkali metals are known. KO3, RbO3, and CsO3 can be prepared from their respective superoxides:

 

Although KO3 can be formed as above, it can also be formed from potassium hydroxide and ozone:[45]

 

NaO3 and LiO3 must be prepared by action of CsO3 in liquid NH3 on an ion-exchange resin containing Na+ or Li+ ions:[46]

 

A solution of calcium in ammonia reacts with ozone to give ammonium ozonide and not calcium ozonide:[40]

 

Applications edit

Ozone can be used to remove iron and manganese from water, forming a precipitate which can be filtered:

 

Ozone will also oxidize dissolved hydrogen sulfide in water to sulfurous acid:

 

These three reactions are central in the use of ozone-based well water treatment.

Ozone will also detoxify cyanides by converting them to cyanates.

 

Ozone will also completely decompose urea:[47]

 

Spectroscopic properties edit

Ozone is a bent triatomic molecule with three vibrational modes: the symmetric stretch (1103.157 cm−1), bend (701.42 cm−1) and antisymmetric stretch (1042.096 cm−1).[48] The symmetric stretch and bend are weak absorbers, but the antisymmetric stretch is strong and responsible for ozone being an important minor greenhouse gas. This IR band is also used to detect ambient and atmospheric ozone although UV-based measurements are more common.[49]

The electromagnetic spectrum of ozone is quite complex. An overview can be seen at the MPI Mainz UV/VIS Spectral Atlas of Gaseous Molecules of Atmospheric Interest.[50]

All of the bands are dissociative, meaning that the molecule falls apart to O + O2 after absorbing a photon. The most important absorption is the Hartley band, extending from slightly above 300 nm down to slightly above 200 nm. It is this band that is responsible for absorbing UV C in the stratosphere.

On the high wavelength side, the Hartley band transitions to the so-called Huggins band, which falls off rapidly until disappearing by ~360 nm. Above 400 nm, extending well out into the NIR, are the Chappius and Wulf bands. There, unstructured absorption bands are useful for detecting high ambient concentrations of ozone, but are so weak that they do not have much practical effect.

There are additional absorption bands in the far UV, which increase slowly from 200 nm down to reaching a maximum at ~120 nm.

Ozone in Earth's atmosphere edit

 
The distribution of atmospheric ozone in partial pressure as a function of altitude
 
Concentration of ozone as measured by the Nimbus-7 satellite
 
Total ozone concentration in June 2000 as measured by the NASA EP-TOMS satellite instrument

The standard way to express total ozone levels (the amount of ozone in a given vertical column) in the atmosphere is by using Dobson units. Point measurements are reported as mole fractions in nmol/mol (parts per billion, ppb) or as concentrations in μg/m3. The study of ozone concentration in the atmosphere started in the 1920s.[51]

Ozone layer edit

Location and production edit

The highest levels of ozone in the atmosphere are in the stratosphere, in a region also known as the ozone layer between about 10 and 50 km above the surface (or between about 6 and 31 miles). However, even in this "layer", the ozone concentrations are only two to eight parts per million, so most of the oxygen there is dioxygen, O2, at about 210,000 parts per million by volume.[52]

Ozone in the stratosphere is mostly produced from short-wave ultraviolet rays between 240 and 160 nm. Oxygen starts to absorb weakly at 240 nm in the Herzberg bands, but most of the oxygen is dissociated by absorption in the strong Schumann–Runge bands between 200 and 160 nm where ozone does not absorb. While shorter wavelength light, extending to even the X-Ray limit, is energetic enough to dissociate molecular oxygen, there is relatively little of it, and, the strong solar emission at Lyman-alpha, 121 nm, falls at a point where molecular oxygen absorption is a minimum.[53]

The process of ozone creation and destruction is called the Chapman cycle and starts with the photolysis of molecular oxygen

 

followed by reaction of the oxygen atom with another molecule of oxygen to form ozone.

 

where "M" denotes the third body that carries off the excess energy of the reaction. The ozone molecule can then absorb a UV-C photon and dissociate

 

The excess kinetic energy heats the stratosphere when the O atoms and the molecular oxygen fly apart and collide with other molecules. This conversion of UV light into kinetic energy warms the stratosphere. The oxygen atoms produced in the photolysis of ozone then react back with other oxygen molecule as in the previous step to form more ozone. In the clear atmosphere, with only nitrogen and oxygen, ozone can react with the atomic oxygen to form two molecules of O2:

 

An estimate of the rate of this termination step to the cycling of atomic oxygen back to ozone can be found simply by taking the ratios of the concentration of O2 to O3. The termination reaction is catalysed by the presence of certain free radicals, of which the most important are hydroxyl (OH), nitric oxide (NO) and atomic chlorine (Cl) and bromine (Br). In the second half of the 20th century, the amount of ozone in the stratosphere was discovered to be declining, mostly because of increasing concentrations of chlorofluorocarbons (CFC) and similar chlorinated and brominated organic molecules. The concern over the health effects of the decline led to the 1987 Montreal Protocol, the ban on the production of many ozone depleting chemicals and in the first and second decade of the 21st century the beginning of the recovery of stratospheric ozone concentrations.

Importance to surface-dwelling life on Earth edit

 
Levels of ozone at various altitudes and blocking of different bands of ultraviolet radiation. Essentially all UVC (100–280 nm) is blocked by dioxygen (at 100–200 nm) or by ozone (at 200–280 nm) in the atmosphere. The shorter portion of this band and even more energetic UV causes the formation of the ozone layer, when single oxygen atoms produced by UV photolysis of dioxygen (below 240 nm) react with more dioxygen. The ozone layer itself then blocks most, but not quite all, sunburn-producing UVB (280–315 nm). The band of UV closest to visible light, UVA (315–400 nm), is hardly affected by ozone, and most of it reaches the ground.

Ozone in the ozone layer filters out sunlight wavelengths from about 200 nm UV rays to 315 nm, with ozone peak absorption at about 250 nm.[54] This ozone UV absorption is important to life, since it extends the absorption of UV by ordinary oxygen and nitrogen in air (which absorb all wavelengths < 200 nm) through the lower UV-C (200–280 nm) and the entire UV-B band (280–315 nm). The small unabsorbed part that remains of UV-B after passage through ozone causes sunburn in humans, and direct DNA damage in living tissues in both plants and animals. Ozone's effect on mid-range UV-B rays is illustrated by its effect on UV-B at 290 nm, which has a radiation intensity 350 million times as powerful at the top of the atmosphere as at the surface. Nevertheless, enough of UV-B radiation at similar frequency reaches the ground to cause some sunburn, and these same wavelengths are also among those responsible for the production of vitamin D in humans.

The ozone layer has little effect on the longer UV wavelengths called UV-A (315–400 nm), but this radiation does not cause sunburn or direct DNA damage. While UV-A probably does cause long-term skin damage in certain humans, it is not as dangerous to plants and to the health of surface-dwelling organisms on Earth in general (see ultraviolet for more information on near ultraviolet).

Low level ozone edit

Low level ozone (or tropospheric ozone) is an atmospheric pollutant.[55] It is not emitted directly by car engines or by industrial operations, but formed by the reaction of sunlight on air containing hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides that react to form ozone directly at the source of the pollution or many kilometers downwind.

Ozone reacts directly with some hydrocarbons such as aldehydes and thus begins their removal from the air, but the products are themselves key components of smog. Ozone photolysis by UV light leads to production of the hydroxyl radical HO• and this plays a part in the removal of hydrocarbons from the air, but is also the first step in the creation of components of smog such as peroxyacyl nitrates, which can be powerful eye irritants. The atmospheric lifetime of tropospheric ozone is about 22 days; its main removal mechanisms are being deposited to the ground, the above-mentioned reaction giving HO•, and by reactions with OH and the peroxy radical HO2•.[56]

There is evidence of significant reduction in agricultural yields because of increased ground-level ozone and pollution which interferes with photosynthesis and stunts overall growth of some plant species.[57][58] The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed a secondary regulation to reduce crop damage, in addition to the primary regulation designed for the protection of human health.

Low level ozone in urban areas edit

Certain examples of cities with elevated ozone readings are Denver, Colorado; Houston, Texas; and Mexico City, Mexico. Houston has a reading of around 41 nmol/mol, while Mexico City is far more hazardous, with a reading of about 125 nmol/mol.[58]

Low level ozone, or tropospheric ozone, is the most concerning type of ozone pollution in urban areas and is increasing in general.[59] Ozone pollution in urban areas affects denser populations, and is worsened by high populations of vehicles, which emit pollutants NO2 and VOCs, the main contributors to problematic ozone levels.[60] Ozone pollution in urban areas is especially concerning with increasing temperatures, raising heat-related mortality during heat waves.[61] During heat waves in urban areas, ground level ozone pollution can be 20% higher than usual.[62] Ozone pollution in urban areas reaches higher levels of exceedance in the summer and autumn, which may be explained by weather patterns and traffic patterns.[60] People experiencing poverty are more affected by pollution in general, even though these populations are less likely to be contributing to pollution levels.[63]

As mentioned above, Denver, Colorado, is one of the many cities in the U.S. that have high amounts of ozone. According to the American Lung Association, the Denver–Aurora area is the 14th most ozone-polluted area in the U.S.[64] The problem of high ozone levels is not new to this area. In 2004, the EPA allotted the Denver Metro/North Front Range[b] as non-attainment areas per 1997's 8-hour ozone standard,[65] but later deferred this status until 2007. The non-attainment standard indicates that an area does not meet the EPA's air quality standards. The Colorado Ozone Action Plan was created in response, and numerous changes were implemented from this plan. The first major change was that car emission testing was expanded across the state to more counties that did not previously mandate emissions testing, like areas of Larimer and Weld County. There have also been changes made to decrease Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) and Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) emissions, which should help lower ozone levels.

One large contributor to high ozone levels in the area is the oil and natural gas industry situated in the Denver-Julesburg Basin (DJB) which overlaps with a majority of Colorado's metropolitan areas. Ozone is created naturally in the Earth's stratosphere, but is also created in the troposphere from human efforts. Briefly mentioned above, NOx and VOCs react with sunlight to create ozone through a process called photochemistry. One hour elevated ozone events (<75 ppb) "occur during June–August indicating that elevated ozone levels are driven by regional photochemistry".[66] According to an article from the University of Colorado-Boulder, "Oil and natural gas VOC emission have a major role in ozone production and bear the potential to contribute to elevated O3 levels in the Northern Colorado Front Range (NCFR)".[66] Using complex analyses to research wind patterns and emissions from large oil and natural gas operations, the authors concluded that "elevated O3 levels in the NCFR are predominantly correlated with air transport from N– ESE, which are the upwind sectors where the O&NG operations in the Wattenberg Field area of the DJB are located".[66]

Contained in the Colorado Ozone Action Plan, created in 2008, plans exist to evaluate "emission controls for large industrial sources of NOx" and "statewide control requirements for new oil and gas condensate tanks and pneumatic valves".[67] In 2011, the Regional Haze Plan was released that included a more specific plan to help decrease NOx emissions. These efforts are increasingly difficult to implement and take many years to come to pass. Of course there are also other reasons that ozone levels remain high. These include: a growing population meaning more car emissions, and the mountains along the NCFR that can trap emissions. If interested, daily air quality readings can be found at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment's website.[68] As noted earlier, Denver continues to experience high levels of ozone to this day. It will take many years and a systems-thinking approach to combat this issue of high ozone levels in the Front Range of Colorado.

Ozone cracking edit

 
Ozone cracking in natural rubber tubing

Ozone gas attacks any polymer possessing olefinic or double bonds within its chain structure, such as natural rubber, nitrile rubber, and styrene-butadiene rubber. Products made using these polymers are especially susceptible to attack, which causes cracks to grow longer and deeper with time, the rate of crack growth depending on the load carried by the rubber component and the concentration of ozone in the atmosphere. Such materials can be protected by adding antiozonants, such as waxes, which bond to the surface to create a protective film or blend with the material and provide long term protection. Ozone cracking used to be a serious problem in car tires,[69] for example, but it is not an issue with modern tires. On the other hand, many critical products, like gaskets and O-rings, may be attacked by ozone produced within compressed air systems. Fuel lines made of reinforced rubber are also susceptible to attack, especially within the engine compartment, where some ozone is produced by electrical components. Storing rubber products in close proximity to a DC electric motor can accelerate ozone cracking. The commutator of the motor generates sparks which in turn produce ozone.

Ozone as a greenhouse gas edit

Although ozone was present at ground level before the Industrial Revolution, peak concentrations are now far higher than the pre-industrial levels, and even background concentrations well away from sources of pollution are substantially higher.[70][71] Ozone acts as a greenhouse gas, absorbing some of the infrared energy emitted by the earth. Quantifying the greenhouse gas potency of ozone is difficult because it is not present in uniform concentrations across the globe. However, the most widely accepted scientific assessments relating to climate change (e.g. the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Third Assessment Report)[72] suggest that the radiative forcing of tropospheric ozone is about 25% that of carbon dioxide.

The annual global warming potential of tropospheric ozone is between 918 and 1022 tons carbon dioxide equivalent/tons tropospheric ozone. This means on a per-molecule basis, ozone in the troposphere has a radiative forcing effect roughly 1,000 times as strong as carbon dioxide. However, tropospheric ozone is a short-lived greenhouse gas, which decays in the atmosphere much more quickly than carbon dioxide. This means that over a 20-year span, the global warming potential of tropospheric ozone is much less, roughly 62 to 69 tons carbon dioxide equivalent / ton tropospheric ozone.[73]

Because of its short-lived nature, tropospheric ozone does not have strong global effects, but has very strong radiative forcing effects on regional scales. In fact, there are regions of the world where tropospheric ozone has a radiative forcing up to 150% of carbon dioxide.[74] For example, ozone increase in the troposphere is shown to be responsible for ~30% of upper Southern Ocean interior warming between 1955 and 2000.[75]

Health effects edit

For the last few decades, scientists studied the effects of acute and chronic ozone exposure on human health. Hundreds of studies suggest that ozone is harmful to people at levels currently found in urban areas.[76][77] Ozone has been shown to affect the respiratory, cardiovascular and central nervous system. Early death and problems in reproductive health and development are also shown to be associated with ozone exposure.[78]

Vulnerable populations edit

The American Lung Association has identified five populations who are especially vulnerable to the effects of breathing ozone:[79]

  1. Children and teens
  2. People 65 years old and older
  3. People who work or exercise outdoors
  4. People with existing lung diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (also known as COPD, which includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis)
  5. People with cardiovascular disease

Additional evidence suggests that women, those with obesity and low-income populations may also face higher risk from ozone, although more research is needed.[79]

Acute ozone exposure edit

Acute ozone exposure ranges from hours to a few days. Because ozone is a gas, it directly affects the lungs and the entire respiratory system. Inhaled ozone causes inflammation and acute—but reversible—changes in lung function, as well as airway hyperresponsiveness.[80] These changes lead to shortness of breath, wheezing, and coughing which may exacerbate lung diseases, like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) resulting in the need to receive medical treatment.[81][82] Acute and chronic exposure to ozone has been shown to cause an increased risk of respiratory infections, due to the following mechanism.[83]

Multiple studies have been conducted to determine the mechanism behind ozone's harmful effects, particularly in the lungs. These studies have shown that exposure to ozone causes changes in the immune response within the lung tissue, resulting in disruption of both the innate and adaptive immune response, as well as altering the protective function of lung epithelial cells.[84] It is thought that these changes in immune response and the related inflammatory response are factors that likely contribute to the increased risk of lung infections, and worsening or triggering of asthma and reactive airways after exposure to ground-level ozone pollution.[84][85]

The innate (cellular) immune system consists of various chemical signals and cell types that work broadly and against multiple pathogen types, typically bacteria or foreign bodies/substances in the host.[85][86] The cells of the innate system include phagocytes, neutrophils,[86] both thought to contribute to the mechanism of ozone pathology in the lungs, as the functioning of these cell types have been shown to change after exposure to ozone.[85] Macrophages, cells that serve the purpose of eliminating pathogens or foreign material through the process of "phagocytosis",[86] have been shown to change the level of inflammatory signals they release in response to ozone, either up-regulating and resulting in an inflammatory response in the lung, or down-regulating and reducing immune protection.[84] Neutrophils, another important cell type of the innate immune system that primarily targets bacterial pathogens,[86] are found to be present in the airways within 6 hours of exposure to high ozone levels. Despite high levels in the lung tissues, however, their ability to clear bacteria appears impaired by exposure to ozone.[84]

The adaptive immune system is the branch of immunity that provides long-term protection via the development of antibodies targeting specific pathogens and is also impacted by high ozone exposure.[85][86] Lymphocytes, a cellular component of the adaptive immune response, produce an increased amount of inflammatory chemicals called "cytokines" after exposure to ozone, which may contribute to airway hyperreactivity and worsening asthma symptoms.[84]

The airway epithelial cells also play an important role in protecting individuals from pathogens. In normal tissue, the epithelial layer forms a protective barrier, and also contains specialized ciliary structures that work to clear foreign bodies, mucus and pathogens from the lungs. When exposed to ozone, the cilia become damaged and mucociliary clearance of pathogens is reduced. Furthermore, the epithelial barrier becomes weakened, allowing pathogens to cross the barrier, proliferate and spread into deeper tissues. Together, these changes in the epithelial barrier help make individuals more susceptible to pulmonary infections.[84]

Inhaling ozone not only affects the immune system and lungs, but it may also affect the heart as well. Ozone causes short-term autonomic imbalance leading to changes in heart rate and reduction in heart rate variability;[87] and high levels exposure for as little as one-hour results in a supraventricular arrhythmia in the elderly,[88] both increase the risk of premature death and stroke. Ozone may also lead to vasoconstriction resulting in increased systemic arterial pressure contributing to increased risk of cardiac morbidity and mortality in patients with pre-existing cardiac diseases.[89][90]

Chronic ozone exposure edit

Breathing ozone for periods longer than eight hours at a time for weeks, months or years defines chronic exposure. Numerous studies suggest a serious impact on the health of various populations from this exposure.

One study finds significant positive associations between chronic ozone and all-cause, circulatory, and respiratory mortality with 2%, 3%, and 12% increases in risk per 10 ppb[91] and report an association (95% CI) of annual ozone and all-cause mortality with a hazard ratio of 1.02 (1.01–1.04), and with cardiovascular mortality of 1.03 (1.01–1.05). A similar study finds similar associations with all-cause mortality and even larger effects for cardiovascular mortality.[92] An increased risk of mortality from respiratory causes is associated with long-term chronic exposure to ozone.[93]

Chronic ozone has detrimental effects on children, especially those with asthma. The risk for hospitalization in children with asthma increases with chronic exposure to ozone; younger children and those with low-income status are even at greater risk.[94]

Adults suffering from respiratory diseases (asthma,[95] COPD,[96] lung cancer[97]) are at a higher risk of mortality and morbidity and critically ill patients have an increased risk of developing acute respiratory distress syndrome with chronic ozone exposure as well.[98]

Ozone produced by air cleaners edit

Ozone generators sold as air cleaners intentionally produce the gas ozone.[42] These are often marketed to control indoor air pollution, and use misleading terms to describe ozone. Some examples are describing it as "energized oxygen" or "pure air", suggesting that ozone is a healthy or "better" kind of oxygen.[42] However, according to the EPA, "There is evidence to show that at concentrations that do not exceed public health standards, ozone is not effective at removing many odor-causing chemicals", and "If used at concentrations that do not exceed public health standards, ozone applied to indoor air does not effectively remove viruses, bacteria, mold, or other biological pollutants.".[42] Furthermore, another report states that "results of some controlled studies show that concentrations of ozone considerably higher than these [human safety] standards are possible even when a user follows the manufacturer's operating instructions".[99]

The California Air Resources Board has a page listing air cleaners (many with ionizers) meeting their indoor ozone limit of 0.050 parts per million.[100] From that article:

All portable indoor air cleaning devices sold in California must be certified by the California Air Resources Board (CARB). To be certified, air cleaners must be tested for electrical safety and ozone emissions, and meet an ozone emission concentration limit of 0.050 parts per million. For more information about the regulation, visit the air cleaner regulation.

Ozone air pollution edit

 
Red Alder leaf, showing discolouration caused by ozone pollution[101]
 
Signboard in Gulfton, Houston indicating an ozone watch

Ozone precursors are a group of pollutants, predominantly those emitted during the combustion of fossil fuels. Ground-level ozone pollution (tropospheric ozone) is created near the Earth's surface by the action of daylight UV rays on these precursors. The ozone at ground level is primarily from fossil fuel precursors, but methane is a natural precursor, and the very low natural background level of ozone at ground level is considered safe. This section examines the health impacts of fossil fuel burning, which raises ground level ozone far above background levels.

There is a great deal of evidence to show that ground-level ozone can harm lung function and irritate the respiratory system.[55][102] Exposure to ozone (and the pollutants that produce it) is linked to premature death, asthma, bronchitis, heart attack, and other cardiopulmonary problems.[103][104]

Long-term exposure to ozone has been shown to increase risk of death from respiratory illness.[42] A study of 450,000 people living in U.S. cities saw a significant correlation between ozone levels and respiratory illness over the 18-year follow-up period. The study revealed that people living in cities with high ozone levels, such as Houston or Los Angeles, had an over 30% increased risk of dying from lung disease.[105][106]

Air quality guidelines such as those from the World Health Organization, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the European Union are based on detailed studies designed to identify the levels that can cause measurable ill health effects.

According to scientists with the EPA, susceptible people can be adversely affected by ozone levels as low as 40 nmol/mol.[104][107][108] In the EU, the current target value for ozone concentrations is 120 µg/m3 which is about 60 nmol/mol. This target applies to all member states in accordance with Directive 2008/50/EC.[109] Ozone concentration is measured as a maximum daily mean of 8 hour averages and the target should not be exceeded on more than 25 calendar days per year, starting from January 2010. Whilst the directive requires in the future a strict compliance with 120 µg/m3 limit (i.e. mean ozone concentration not to be exceeded on any day of the year), there is no date set for this requirement and this is treated as a long-term objective.[110]

In the US, the Clean Air Act directs the EPA to set National Ambient Air Quality Standards for several pollutants, including ground-level ozone, and counties out of compliance with these standards are required to take steps to reduce their levels. In May 2008, under a court order, the EPA lowered its ozone standard from 80 nmol/mol to 75 nmol/mol. The move proved controversial, since the Agency's own scientists and advisory board had recommended lowering the standard to 60 nmol/mol.[104] Many public health and environmental groups also supported the 60 nmol/mol standard,[111] and the World Health Organization recommends 100 µg/m3 (51 nmol/mol).[112]

On January 7, 2010, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced proposed revisions to the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for the pollutant ozone, the principal component of smog:

... EPA proposes that the level of the 8-hour primary standard, which was set at 0.075 μmol/mol in the 2008 final rule, should instead be set at a lower level within the range of 0.060 to 0.070 μmol/mol, to provide increased protection for children and other at risk populations against an array of O
3
– related adverse health effects that range from decreased lung function and increased respiratory symptoms to serious indicators of respiratory morbidity including emergency department visits and hospital admissions for respiratory causes, and possibly cardiovascular-related morbidity as well as total non- accidental and cardiopulmonary mortality ...[113]

On October 26, 2015, the EPA published a final rule with an effective date of December 28, 2015, that revised the 8-hour primary NAAQS from 0.075 ppm to 0.070 ppm.[114]

The EPA has developed an air quality index (AQI) to help explain air pollution levels to the general public. Under the current standards, eight-hour average ozone mole fractions of 85 to 104 nmol/mol are described as "unhealthy for sensitive groups", 105 nmol/mol to 124 nmol/mol as "unhealthy", and 125 nmol/mol to 404 nmol/mol as "very unhealthy".[115]

Ozone can also be present in indoor air pollution, partly as a result of electronic equipment such as photocopiers. A connection has also been known to exist between the increased pollen, fungal spores, and ozone caused by thunderstorms and hospital admissions of asthma sufferers.[116]

In the Victorian era, one British folk myth held that the smell of the sea was caused by ozone. In fact, the characteristic "smell of the sea" is caused by dimethyl sulfide, a chemical generated by phytoplankton. Victorian Britons considered the resulting smell "bracing".[117]

Heat waves edit

An investigation to assess the joint mortality effects of ozone and heat during the European heat waves in 2003, concluded that these appear to be additive.[118]

Physiology edit

Ozone, along with reactive forms of oxygen such as superoxide, singlet oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, and hypochlorite ions, is produced by white blood cells and other biological systems (such as the roots of marigolds) as a means of destroying foreign bodies. Ozone reacts directly with organic double bonds. Also, when ozone breaks down to dioxygen it gives rise to oxygen free radicals, which are highly reactive and capable of damaging many organic molecules. Moreover, it is believed that the powerful oxidizing properties of ozone may be a contributing factor of inflammation. The cause-and-effect relationship of how the ozone is created in the body and what it does is still under consideration and still subject to various interpretations, since other body chemical processes can trigger some of the same reactions. There is evidence linking the antibody-catalyzed water-oxidation pathway of the human immune response to the production of ozone. In this system, ozone is produced by antibody-catalyzed production of trioxidane from water and neutrophil-produced singlet oxygen.[119]

When inhaled, ozone reacts with compounds lining the lungs to form specific, cholesterol-derived metabolites that are thought to facilitate the build-up and pathogenesis of atherosclerotic plaques (a form of heart disease). These metabolites have been confirmed as naturally occurring in human atherosclerotic arteries and are categorized into a class of secosterols termed atheronals, generated by ozonolysis of cholesterol's double bond to form a 5,6 secosterol[120] as well as a secondary condensation product via aldolization.[121]

Impact on plant growth and crop yields edit

Ozone has been implicated to have an adverse effect on plant growth: "... ozone reduced total chlorophylls, carotenoid and carbohydrate concentration, and increased 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) content and ethylene production. In treated plants, the ascorbate leaf pool was decreased, while lipid peroxidation and solute leakage were significantly higher than in ozone-free controls. The data indicated that ozone triggered protective mechanisms against oxidative stress in citrus."[122] Studies that have used pepper plants as a model have shown that ozone decreased fruit yield and changed fruit quality.[123][124] Furthermore, it was also observed a decrease in chlorophylls levels and antioxidant defences on the leaves, as well as increased the reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and lipid and protein damages.[123][124]

A 2022 study concludes that East Asia loses 63 billion dollars in crops per year due to ozone pollution, a byproduct of fossil fuel combustion. China loses about one-third of its potential wheat production and one-fourth of its rice production.[125][126]

Safety regulations edit

Because of the strongly oxidizing properties of ozone, ozone is a primary irritant, affecting especially the eyes and respiratory systems and can be hazardous at even low concentrations. The Canadian Centre for Occupation Safety and Health reports that:

Even very low concentrations of ozone can be harmful to the upper respiratory tract and the lungs. The severity of injury depends on both the concentration of ozone and the duration of exposure. Severe and permanent lung injury or death could result from even a very short-term exposure to relatively low concentrations."[127]

To protect workers potentially exposed to ozone, U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration has established a permissible exposure limit (PEL) of 0.1 μmol/mol (29 CFR 1910.1000 table Z-1), calculated as an 8-hour time weighted average. Higher concentrations are especially hazardous and NIOSH has established an Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health Limit (IDLH) of 5 μmol/mol.[128] Work environments where ozone is used or where it is likely to be produced should have adequate ventilation and it is prudent to have a monitor for ozone that will alarm if the concentration exceeds the OSHA PEL. Continuous monitors for ozone are available from several suppliers.

Elevated ozone exposure can occur on passenger aircraft, with levels depending on altitude and atmospheric turbulence.[129] U.S. Federal Aviation Administration regulations set a limit of 250 nmol/mol with a maximum four-hour average of 100 nmol/mol.[130] Some planes are equipped with ozone converters in the ventilation system to reduce passenger exposure.[129]

Production edit

 
Ozone production demonstration, Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, 1926

Ozone generators, or ozonators,[131] are used to produce ozone for cleaning air or removing smoke odours in unoccupied rooms. These ozone generators can produce over 3 g of ozone per hour. Ozone often forms in nature under conditions where O2 will not react.[28] Ozone used in industry is measured in μmol/mol (ppm, parts per million), nmol/mol (ppb, parts per billion), μg/m3, mg/h (milligrams per hour) or weight percent. The regime of applied concentrations ranges from 1% to 5% (in air) and from 6% to 14% (in oxygen) for older generation methods. New electrolytic methods can achieve up 20% to 30% dissolved ozone concentrations in output water.

Temperature and humidity play a large role in how much ozone is being produced using traditional generation methods (such as corona discharge and ultraviolet light). Old generation methods will produce less than 50% of nominal capacity if operated with humid ambient air, as opposed to very dry air. New generators, using electrolytic methods, can achieve higher purity and dissolution through using water molecules as the source of ozone production.

Coronal discharge method edit

 
A homemade ozone generator. Ozone is produced in the corona discharge.

This is the most common type of ozone generator for most industrial and personal uses. While variations of the "hot spark" coronal discharge method of ozone production exist, including medical grade and industrial grade ozone generators, these units usually work by means of a corona discharge tube or ozone plate.[132][133] They are typically cost-effective and do not require an oxygen source other than the ambient air to produce ozone concentrations of 3–6%. Fluctuations in ambient air, due to weather or other environmental conditions, cause variability in ozone production. However, they also produce nitrogen oxides as a by-product. Use of an air dryer can reduce or eliminate nitric acid formation by removing water vapor and increase ozone production. At room temperature, nitric acid will form into a vapour that is hazardous if inhaled. Symptoms can include chest pain, shortness of breath, headaches and a dry nose and throat causing a burning sensation. Use of an oxygen concentrator can further increase the ozone production and further reduce the risk of nitric acid formation by removing not only the water vapor, but also the bulk of the nitrogen.

Ultraviolet light edit

UV ozone generators, or vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV) ozone generators, employ a light source that generates a narrow-band ultraviolet light, a subset of that produced by the Sun. The Sun's UV sustains the ozone layer in the stratosphere of Earth.[134]

UV ozone generators use ambient air for ozone production, no air prep systems are used (air dryer or oxygen concentrator), therefore these generators tend to be less expensive. However, UV ozone generators usually produce ozone with a concentration of about 0.5% or lower which limits the potential ozone production rate. Another disadvantage of this method is that it requires the ambient air (oxygen) to be exposed to the UV source for a longer amount of time, and any gas that is not exposed to the UV source will not be treated. This makes UV generators impractical for use in situations that deal with rapidly moving air or water streams (in-duct air sterilization, for example). Production of ozone is one of the potential dangers of ultraviolet germicidal irradiation. VUV ozone generators are used in swimming pools and spa applications ranging to millions of gallons of water. VUV ozone generators, unlike corona discharge generators, do not produce harmful nitrogen by-products and also unlike corona discharge systems, VUV ozone generators work extremely well in humid air environments. There is also not normally a need for expensive off-gas mechanisms, and no need for air driers or oxygen concentrators which require extra costs and maintenance.

Cold plasma edit

In the cold plasma method, pure oxygen gas is exposed to a plasma created by DBD. The diatomic oxygen is split into single atoms, which then recombine in triplets to form ozone. It is common in the industry to mislabel some DBD ozone generators as CD Corona Discharge generators. Typically all solid flat metal electrode ozone generators produce ozone using the dielectric barrier discharge method. Cold plasma machines use pure oxygen as the input source and produce a maximum concentration of about 24% ozone. They produce far greater quantities of ozone in a given time compared to ultraviolet production that has about 2% efficiency. The discharges manifest as filamentary transfer of electrons (micro discharges) in a gap between two electrodes. In order to evenly distribute the micro discharges, a dielectric insulator must be used to separate the metallic electrodes and to prevent arcing.

Electrolytic edit

Electrolytic ozone generation (EOG) splits water molecules into H2, O2, and O3. In most EOG methods, the hydrogen gas will be removed to leave oxygen and ozone as the only reaction products. Therefore, EOG can achieve higher dissolution in water without other competing gases found in corona discharge method, such as nitrogen gases present in ambient air. This method of generation can achieve concentrations of 20–30% and is independent of air quality because water is used as the source material. Production of ozone electrolytically is typically unfavorable because of the high overpotential required to produce ozone as compared to oxygen. This is why ozone is not produced during typical water electrolysis. However, it is possible to increase the overpotential of oxygen by careful catalyst selection such that ozone is preferentially produced under electrolysis. Catalysts typically chosen for this approach are lead dioxide[135] or boron-doped diamond.[136]

The ozone to oxygen ratio is improved by increasing current density at the anode, cooling the electrolyte around the anode close to 0 °C, using an acidic electrolyte (such as dilute sulfuric acid) instead of a basic solution, and by applying pulsed current instead of DC.[137]

Special considerations edit

Ozone cannot be stored and transported like other industrial gases (because it quickly decays into diatomic oxygen) and must therefore be produced on site. Available ozone generators vary in the arrangement and design of the high-voltage electrodes. At production capacities higher than 20 kg per hour, a gas/water tube heat-exchanger may be utilized as ground electrode and assembled with tubular high-voltage electrodes on the gas-side. The regime of typical gas pressures is around 2 bars (200 kPa) absolute in oxygen and 3 bars (300 kPa) absolute in air. Several megawatts of electrical power may be installed in large facilities, applied as single phase AC current at 50 to 8000 Hz and peak voltages between 3,000 and 20,000 volts. Applied voltage is usually inversely related to the applied frequency.

The dominating parameter influencing ozone generation efficiency is the gas temperature, which is controlled by cooling water temperature and/or gas velocity. The cooler the water, the better the ozone synthesis. The lower the gas velocity, the higher the concentration (but the lower the net ozone produced). At typical industrial conditions, almost 90% of the effective power is dissipated as heat and needs to be removed by a sufficient cooling water flow.

Because of the high reactivity of ozone, only a few materials may be used like stainless steel (quality 316L), titanium, aluminium (as long as no moisture is present), glass, polytetrafluorethylene, or polyvinylidene fluoride. Viton may be used with the restriction of constant mechanical forces and absence of humidity (humidity limitations apply depending on the formulation). Hypalon may be used with the restriction that no water comes in contact with it, except for normal atmospheric levels. Embrittlement or shrinkage is the common mode of failure of elastomers with exposure to ozone. Ozone cracking is the common mode of failure of elastomer seals like O-rings.

Silicone rubbers are usually adequate for use as gaskets in ozone concentrations below 1 wt%, such as in equipment for accelerated aging of rubber samples.

Incidental production edit

Ozone may be formed from O
2
by electrical discharges and by action of high energy electromagnetic radiation. Unsuppressed arcing in electrical contacts, motor brushes, or mechanical switches breaks down the chemical bonds of the atmospheric oxygen surrounding the contacts [O
2
→ 2O]. Free radicals of oxygen in and around the arc recombine to create ozone [O
3
].[138] Certain electrical equipment generate significant levels of ozone. This is especially true of devices using high voltages, such as ionic air purifiers, laser printers, photocopiers, tasers and arc welders. Electric motors using brushes can generate ozone from repeated sparking inside the unit. Large motors that use brushes, such as those used by elevators or hydraulic pumps, will generate more ozone than smaller motors.

Ozone is similarly formed in the Catatumbo lightning storms phenomenon on the Catatumbo River in Venezuela, though ozone's instability makes it dubious that it has any effect on the ozonosphere.[139] It is the world's largest single natural generator of ozone, lending calls for it to be designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[140]

Laboratory production edit

 
A laboratory method for the preparation of ozone by using Siemen's Ozoniser.

In the laboratory, ozone can be produced by electrolysis using a 9 volt battery, a pencil graphite rod cathode, a platinum wire anode and a 3 molar sulfuric acid electrolyte.[141] The half cell reactions taking place are:

 

where represents the standard electrode potential.

In the net reaction, three equivalents of water are converted into one equivalent of ozone and three equivalents of hydrogen. Oxygen formation is a competing reaction.

It can also be generated by a high voltage arc. In its simplest form, high voltage AC, such as the output of a neon-sign transformer is connected to two metal rods with the ends placed sufficiently close to each other to allow an arc. The resulting arc will convert atmospheric oxygen to ozone.

It is often desirable to contain the ozone. This can be done with an apparatus consisting of two concentric glass tubes sealed together at the top with gas ports at the top and bottom of the outer tube. The inner core should have a length of metal foil inserted into it connected to one side of the power source. The other side of the power source should be connected to another piece of foil wrapped around the outer tube. A source of dry O
2
is applied to the bottom port. When high voltage is applied to the foil leads, electricity will discharge between the dry dioxygen in the middle and form O
3
and O
2
which will flow out the top port. This is called a Siemen's ozoniser. The reaction can be summarized as follows:[28]

 

Applications edit

Industry edit

The largest use of ozone is in the preparation of pharmaceuticals, synthetic lubricants, and many other commercially useful organic compounds, where it is used to sever carbon-carbon bonds.[28] It can also be used for bleaching substances and for killing microorganisms in air and water sources.[142] Many municipal drinking water systems kill bacteria with ozone instead of the more common chlorine.[143] Ozone has a very high oxidation potential.[144] Ozone does not form organochlorine compounds, nor does it remain in the water after treatment. Ozone can form the suspected carcinogen bromate in source water with high bromide concentrations. The U.S. Safe Drinking Water Act mandates that these systems introduce an amount of chlorine to maintain a minimum of 0.2 μmol/mol residual free chlorine in the pipes, based on results of regular testing. Where electrical power is abundant, ozone is a cost-effective method of treating water, since it is produced on demand and does not require transportation and storage of hazardous chemicals. Once it has decayed, it leaves no taste or odour in drinking water.

Although low levels of ozone have been advertised to be of some disinfectant use in residential homes, the concentration of ozone in dry air required to have a rapid, substantial effect on airborne pathogens exceeds safe levels recommended by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration and Environmental Protection Agency. Humidity control can vastly improve both the killing power of the ozone and the rate at which it decays back to oxygen (more humidity allows more effectiveness). Spore forms of most pathogens are very tolerant of atmospheric ozone in concentrations at which asthma patients start to have issues.

In 1908 artificial ozonisation of the Central Line of the London Underground was introduced for aerial disinfection. The process was found to be worthwhile, but was phased out by 1956. However the beneficial effect was maintained by the ozone created incidentally from the electrical discharges of the train motors (see above: Incidental production).[145]

Ozone generators were made available to schools and universities in Wales for the Autumn term 2021, to disinfect classrooms after COVID-19 outbreaks.[146]

Industrially, ozone is used to:

  • Disinfect laundry in hospitals, food factories, care homes etc.;[147]
  • Disinfect water in place of chlorine[28]
  • Deodorize air and objects, such as after a fire. This process is extensively used in fabric restoration
  • Kill bacteria on food or on contact surfaces;[148]
  • Water intense industries such as breweries and dairy plants can make effective use of dissolved ozone as a replacement to chemical sanitizers such as peracetic acid, hypochlorite or heat.
  • Disinfect cooling towers and control Legionella with reduced chemical consumption, water bleed-off and increased performance.
  • Sanitize swimming pools and spas
  • Kill insects in stored grain[149]
  • Scrub yeast and mold spores from the air in food processing plants;
  • Wash fresh fruits and vegetables to kill yeast, mold and bacteria;[148]
  • Chemically attack contaminants in water (iron, arsenic, hydrogen sulfide, nitrites, and complex organics lumped together as "colour");
  • Provide an aid to flocculation (agglomeration of molecules, which aids in filtration, where the iron and arsenic are removed);
  • Manufacture chemical compounds via chemical synthesis[150]
  • Clean and bleach fabrics (the former use is utilized in fabric restoration; the latter use is patented);[151]
  • Act as an antichlor in chlorine-based bleaching;
  • Assist in processing plastics to allow adhesion of inks;
  • Age rubber samples to determine the useful life of a batch of rubber;
  • Eradicate water-borne parasites such as Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium in surface water treatment plants.

Ozone is a reagent in many organic reactions in the laboratory and in industry. Ozonolysis is the cleavage of an alkene to carbonyl compounds.

Many hospitals around the world use large ozone generators to decontaminate operating rooms between surgeries. The rooms are cleaned and then sealed airtight before being filled with ozone which effectively kills or neutralizes all remaining bacteria.[152]

Ozone is used as an alternative to chlorine or chlorine dioxide in the bleaching of wood pulp.[153] It is often used in conjunction with oxygen and hydrogen peroxide to eliminate the need for chlorine-containing compounds in the manufacture of high-quality, white paper.[154]

Ozone can be used to detoxify cyanide wastes (for example from gold and silver mining) by oxidizing cyanide to cyanate and eventually to carbon dioxide.[155]

Water disinfection edit

Since the invention of Dielectric Barrier Discharge (DBD) plasma reactors, it has been employed for water treatment with ozone.[156] However, with cheaper alternative disinfectants like chlorine, such applications of DBD ozone water decontamination have been limited by high power consumption and bulky equipment.[157][158] Despite this, with research revealing the negative impacts of common disinfectants like chlorine with respect to toxic residuals and ineffectiveness in killing certain micro-organisms,[159] DBD plasma-based ozone decontamination is of interest in current available technologies. Although ozonation of water with a high concentration of bromide does lead to the formation of undesirable brominated disinfection byproducts, unless drinking water is produced by desalination, ozonation can generally be applied without concern for these byproducts.[158][160][161][162] Advantages of ozone include high thermodynamic oxidation potential, less sensitivity to organic material and better tolerance for pH variations while retaining the ability to kill bacteria, fungi, viruses, as well as spores and cysts.[163][164][165] Although, ozone has been widely accepted in Europe for decades, it is sparingly used for decontamination in the U.S due to limitations of high-power consumption, bulky installation and stigma attached with ozone toxicity.[157][166] Considering this, recent research efforts have been directed towards the study of effective ozone water treatment systems.[167] Researchers have looked into lightweight and compact low power surface DBD reactors,[168][169] energy efficient volume DBD reactors[170] and low power micro-scale DBD reactors.[171][172] Such studies can help pave the path to re-acceptance of DBD plasma-based ozone decontamination of water, especially in the U.S.

Consumers edit

Devices generating high levels of ozone, some of which use ionization, are used to sanitize and deodorize uninhabited buildings, rooms, ductwork, woodsheds, boats and other vehicles.

Ozonated water is used to launder clothes and to sanitize food, drinking water, and surfaces in the home. According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), it is "amending the food additive regulations to provide for the safe use of ozone in gaseous and aqueous phases as an antimicrobial agent on food, including meat and poultry." Studies at California Polytechnic University demonstrated that 0.3 μmol/mol levels of ozone dissolved in filtered tapwater can produce a reduction of more than 99.99% in such food-borne microorganisms as salmonella, E. coli 0157:H7 and Campylobacter. This quantity is 20,000 times the WHO-recommended limits stated above.[148][173] Ozone can be used to remove pesticide residues from fruits and vegetables.[174][175]

Ozone is used in homes and hot tubs to kill bacteria in the water and to reduce the amount of chlorine or bromine required by reactivating them to their free state. Since ozone does not remain in the water long enough, ozone by itself is ineffective at preventing cross-contamination among bathers and must be used in conjunction with halogens. Gaseous ozone created by ultraviolet light or by corona discharge is injected into the water.[176]

Ozone is also widely used in the treatment of water in aquariums and fishponds. Its use can minimize bacterial growth, control parasites, eliminate transmission of some diseases, and reduce or eliminate "yellowing" of the water. Ozone must not come in contact with fishes' gill structures. Natural saltwater (with life forms) provides enough "instantaneous demand" that controlled amounts of ozone activate bromide ions to hypobromous acid, and the ozone entirely decays in a few seconds to minutes. If oxygen-fed ozone is used, the water will be higher in dissolved oxygen and fishes' gill structures will atrophy, making them dependent on oxygen-enriched water.

Aquaculture edit

Ozonation – a process of infusing water with ozone – can be used in aquaculture to facilitate organic breakdown. Ozone is also added to recirculating systems to reduce nitrite levels[177] through conversion into nitrate. If nitrite levels in the water are high, nitrites will also accumulate in the blood and tissues of fish, where it interferes with oxygen transport (it causes oxidation of the heme-group of haemoglobin from ferrous (Fe2+
) to ferric (Fe3+
), making haemoglobin unable to bind O
2
).[178] Despite these apparent positive effects, ozone use in recirculation systems has been linked to reducing the level of bioavailable iodine in salt water systems, resulting in iodine deficiency symptoms such as goitre and decreased growth in Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis) larvae.[179]

Ozonate seawater is used for surface disinfection of haddock and Atlantic halibut eggs against nodavirus. Nodavirus is a lethal and vertically transmitted virus which causes severe mortality in fish. Haddock eggs should not be treated with high ozone level as eggs so treated did not hatch and died after 3–4 days.[180]

Agriculture edit

Ozone application on freshly cut pineapple and banana shows increase in flavonoids and total phenol contents when exposure is up to 20 minutes. Decrease in ascorbic acid (one form of vitamin C) content is observed but the positive effect on total phenol content and flavonoids can overcome the negative effect.[181] Tomatoes upon treatment with ozone show an increase in β-carotene, lutein and lycopene.[182] However, ozone application on strawberries in pre-harvest period shows decrease in ascorbic acid content.[183]

Ozone facilitates the extraction of some heavy metals from soil using EDTA. EDTA forms strong, water-soluble coordination compounds with some heavy metals (Pb, Zn) thereby making it possible to dissolve them out from contaminated soil. If contaminated soil is pre-treated with ozone, the extraction efficacy of Pb, Am and Pu increases by 11.0–28.9%,[184] 43.5%[185] and 50.7%[185] respectively.

Unintentional Environmental Effect on Pollinators edit

Crop pollination is an essential part of an ecosystem. Ozone can have detrimental effects on plant-pollinator interactions.[186] Pollinators carry pollen from one plant to another. This is an essential cycle inside of an ecosystem. Causing changes in certain atmospheric conditions around pollination sites or with xenobiotics could cause unknown changes to the natural cycles of pollinators and flowering plants. In a study conducted in North-Western Europe, crop pollinators were negatively affected more when ozone levels were higher.[187]

Alternative medicine edit

The use of ozone for the treatment of medical conditions is not supported by high quality evidence, and is generally considered alternative medicine.[188]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes

  1. ^ This vapor pressure is for the critical temperature, which is below room temperature.
  2. ^ This includes Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, Jefferson, and parts of Larimer and Weld counties.

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ozone, other, uses, disambiguation, oxygen, redirects, here, jean, michel, jarre, album, oxygène, trioxygen, inorganic, molecule, with, chemical, formula, pale, blue, with, distinctively, pungent, smell, allotrope, oxygen, that, much, less, stable, than, diato. For other uses see Ozone disambiguation Oxygen 3 redirects here For the Jean Michel Jarre album see Oxygene 3 Ozone ˈ oʊ z oʊ n or trioxygen is an inorganic molecule with the chemical formula O3 It is a pale blue gas with a distinctively pungent smell It is an allotrope of oxygen that is much less stable than the diatomic allotrope O2 breaking down in the lower atmosphere to O2 dioxygen Ozone is formed from dioxygen by the action of ultraviolet UV light and electrical discharges within the Earth s atmosphere It is present in very low concentrations throughout the atmosphere with its highest concentration high in the ozone layer of the stratosphere which absorbs most of the Sun s ultraviolet UV radiation Ozone Ball and stick model of ozone Spacefill model of ozoneNamesIUPAC name OzoneSystematic IUPAC name TrioxygenOther names 2l4 trioxidiene catena trioxygenIdentifiersCAS Number 10028 15 6 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageChEBI CHEBI 25812 YChemSpider 23208 YECHA InfoCard 100 030 051EC Number 233 069 2Gmelin Reference 1101IUPHAR BPS 6297MeSH OzonePubChem CID 24823RTECS number RS8225000UNII 66H7ZZK23N YCompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID0021098InChI InChI 1S O3 c1 3 2 YKey CBENFWSGALASAD UHFFFAOYSA N YInChI 1 O3 c1 3 2Key CBENFWSGALASAD UHFFFAOYAYSMILES O O OPropertiesChemical formula O 3Molar mass 47 997 g mol 1Appearance Colourless to pale blue gas 1 Odor Pungent 1 Density 2 144 g L at 0 C Melting point 192 2 C 313 9 F 81 0 KBoiling point 112 C 170 F 161 KSolubility in water 1 05 g L 1 at 0 C Solubility in other solvents Very soluble in CCl4 sulfuric acidVapor pressure 55 7 atm 2 12 15 C or 10 13 F or 261 00 K a Conjugate acid Protonated ozoneMagnetic susceptibility x 6 7 10 6 cm3 molRefractive index nD 1 2226 liquid 1 00052 gas STP 546 nm note high dispersion 3 StructureSpace group C2vCoordination geometry DigonalMolecular shape DihedralHybridisation sp2 for O1Dipole moment 0 53 DThermochemistryStd molarentropy S 298 238 92 J K 1 mol 1Std enthalpy offormation DfH 298 142 67 kJ mol 1HazardsGHS labelling PictogramsSignal word DangerHazard statements H270 H314NFPA 704 fire diamond 404OXLethal dose or concentration LD LC LCLo lowest published 12 6 ppm mouse 3 hr 50 ppm human 30 min 36 ppm rabbit 3 hr 21 ppm mouse 3 hr 21 8 ppm rat 3 hr 24 8 ppm guinea pig 3 hr 4 8 ppm rat 4 hr 4 NIOSH US health exposure limits PEL Permissible TWA 0 1 ppm 0 2 mg m3 1 REL Recommended C 0 1 ppm 0 2 mg m3 1 IDLH Immediate danger 5 ppm 1 Related compoundsRelated compounds Sulfur dioxideTrisulfurDisulfur monoxideCyclic ozoneExcept where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa Y verify what is Y N Infobox references Ozone s odor is reminiscent of chlorine and detectable by many people at concentrations of as little as 0 1 ppm in air Ozone s O3 structure was determined in 1865 The molecule was later proven to have a bent structure and to be weakly diamagnetic In standard conditions ozone is a pale blue gas that condenses at cryogenic temperatures to a dark blue liquid and finally a violet black solid Ozone s instability with regard to more common dioxygen is such that both concentrated gas and liquid ozone may decompose explosively at elevated temperatures physical shock or fast warming to the boiling point 5 6 It is therefore used commercially only in low concentrations Ozone is a powerful oxidant far more so than dioxygen and has many industrial and consumer applications related to oxidation This same high oxidizing potential however causes ozone to damage mucous and respiratory tissues in animals and also tissues in plants above concentrations of about 0 1 ppm While this makes ozone a potent respiratory hazard and pollutant near ground level a higher concentration in the ozone layer from two to eight ppm is beneficial preventing damaging UV light from reaching the Earth s surface Contents 1 Nomenclature 2 History 3 Physical properties 4 Structure 5 Reactions 5 1 With metals 5 2 With nitrogen and carbon compounds 5 3 With sulfur compounds 5 4 With alkenes and alkynes 5 5 Other substrates 5 6 Combustion 5 7 Ozone decomposition 5 7 1 Types of ozone decomposition 5 7 2 Kinetics of ozone decomposition into molecular oxygen 5 8 Reduction to ozonides 5 9 Applications 6 Spectroscopic properties 7 Ozone in Earth s atmosphere 7 1 Ozone layer 7 1 1 Location and production 7 1 2 Importance to surface dwelling life on Earth 7 2 Low level ozone 7 2 1 Low level ozone in urban areas 7 2 2 Ozone cracking 7 3 Ozone as a greenhouse gas 8 Health effects 8 1 Vulnerable populations 8 2 Acute ozone exposure 8 3 Chronic ozone exposure 8 4 Ozone produced by air cleaners 8 5 Ozone air pollution 8 5 1 Heat waves 8 6 Physiology 8 7 Impact on plant growth and crop yields 8 8 Safety regulations 9 Production 9 1 Coronal discharge method 9 2 Ultraviolet light 9 3 Cold plasma 9 4 Electrolytic 9 5 Special considerations 9 6 Incidental production 9 7 Laboratory production 10 Applications 10 1 Industry 10 2 Water disinfection 10 3 Consumers 10 4 Aquaculture 10 5 Agriculture 10 6 Unintentional Environmental Effect on Pollinators 10 7 Alternative medicine 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksNomenclature editThe trivial name ozone is the most commonly used and preferred IUPAC name The systematic names 2l4 trioxidiene dubious discuss and catena trioxygen valid IUPAC names are constructed according to the substitutive and additive nomenclatures respectively The name ozone derives from ozein ὄzein the Greek neuter present participle for smell 7 referring to ozone s distinctive smell In appropriate contexts ozone can be viewed as trioxidane with two hydrogen atoms removed and as such trioxidanylidene may be used as a systematic name according to substitutive nomenclature By default these names pay no regard to the radicality of the ozone molecule In an even more specific context this can also name the non radical singlet ground state whereas the diradical state is named trioxidanediyl Trioxidanediyl or ozonide is used non systematically to refer to the substituent group OOO Care should be taken to avoid confusing the name of the group for the context specific name for the ozone given above History edit nbsp Christian Friedrich Schonbein 18 October 1799 29 August 1868 nbsp A prototype ozonometer built by John Smyth in 1865In 1785 Dutch chemist Martinus van Marum was conducting experiments involving electrical sparking above water when he noticed an unusual smell which he attributed to the electrical reactions failing to realize that he had in fact created ozone 8 9 A half century later Christian Friedrich Schonbein noticed the same pungent odour and recognized it as the smell often following a bolt of lightning In 1839 he succeeded in isolating the gaseous chemical and named it ozone from the Greek word ozein ὄzein meaning to smell 10 11 For this reason Schonbein is generally credited with the discovery of ozone 12 13 14 8 He also noted the similarity of ozone smell to the smell of phosphorus and in 1844 proved that the product of reaction of white phosphorus with air is identical 10 A subsequent effort to call ozone electrified oxygen he ridiculed by proposing to call the ozone from white phosphorus phosphorized oxygen 10 The formula for ozone O3 was not determined until 1865 by Jacques Louis Soret 15 and confirmed by Schonbein in 1867 10 16 For much of the second half of the 19th century and well into the 20th ozone was considered a healthy component of the environment by naturalists and health seekers Beaumont California had as its official slogan Beaumont Zone of Ozone as evidenced on postcards and Chamber of Commerce letterhead 17 Naturalists working outdoors often considered the higher elevations beneficial because of their ozone content There is quite a different atmosphere at higher elevation with enough ozone to sustain the necessary energy to work wrote naturalist Henry Henshaw working in Hawaii 18 Seaside air was considered to be healthy because of its believed ozone content The smell giving rise to this belief is in fact that of halogenated seaweed metabolites 19 and dimethyl sulfide 20 Much of ozone s appeal seems to have resulted from its fresh smell which evoked associations with purifying properties Scientists noted its harmful effects In 1873 James Dewar and John Gray McKendrick documented that frogs grew sluggish birds gasped for breath and rabbits blood showed decreased levels of oxygen after exposure to ozonized air which exercised a destructive action 21 12 Schonbein himself reported that chest pains irritation of the mucous membranes and difficulty breathing occurred as a result of inhaling ozone and small mammals died 22 In 1911 Leonard Hill and Martin Flack stated in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B that ozone s healthful effects have by mere iteration become part and parcel of common belief and yet exact physiological evidence in favour of its good effects has been hitherto almost entirely wanting The only thoroughly well ascertained knowledge concerning the physiological effect of ozone so far attained is that it causes irritation and œdema of the lungs and death if inhaled in relatively strong concentration for any time 12 23 During World War I ozone was tested at Queen Alexandra Military Hospital in London as a possible disinfectant for wounds The gas was applied directly to wounds for as long as 15 minutes This resulted in damage to both bacterial cells and human tissue Other sanitizing techniques such as irrigation with antiseptics were found preferable 12 24 Until the 1920s it was not certain whether small amounts of oxozone O4 were also present in ozone samples due to the difficulty of applying analytical chemistry techniques to the explosive concentrated chemical 25 26 In 1923 Georg Maria Schwab working for his doctoral thesis under Ernst Hermann Riesenfeld was the first to successfully solidify ozone and perform accurate analysis which conclusively refuted the oxozone hypothesis 25 26 Further hitherto unmeasured physical properties of pure concentrated ozone were determined by the Riesenfeld group in the 1920s 25 Physical properties edit nbsp Liquid ozoneOzone is a colourless or pale blue gas slightly soluble in water and much more soluble in inert non polar solvents such as carbon tetrachloride or fluorocarbons in which it forms a blue solution At 161 K 112 C 170 F it condenses to form a dark blue liquid It is dangerous to allow this liquid to warm to its boiling point because both concentrated gaseous ozone and liquid ozone can detonate At temperatures below 80 K 193 2 C 315 7 F it forms a violet black solid 27 Most people can detect about 0 01 mmol mol of ozone in air where it has a very specific sharp odour somewhat resembling chlorine bleach Exposure of 0 1 to 1 mmol mol produces headaches burning eyes and irritation to the respiratory passages 28 Even low concentrations of ozone in air are very destructive to organic materials such as latex plastics and animal lung tissue Ozone is weakly diamagnetic 29 Structure editAccording to experimental evidence from microwave spectroscopy ozone is a bent molecule with C2v symmetry similar to the water molecule 30 The O O distances are 127 2 pm 1 272 A The O O O angle is 116 78 31 The central atom is sp hybridized with one lone pair Ozone is a polar molecule with a dipole moment of 0 53 D 32 The molecule can be represented as a resonance hybrid with two contributing structures each with a single bond on one side and double bond on the other The arrangement possesses an overall bond order of 1 5 for both sides It is isoelectronic with the nitrite anion Naturally occurring ozone can be composed of substituted isotopes 16O 17O 18O A cyclic form has been predicted but not observed nbsp Resonance Lewis structures of the ozone moleculeReactions editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ozone is among the most powerful oxidizing agents known far stronger than O2 It is also unstable at high concentrations decaying into ordinary diatomic oxygen Its half life varies with atmospheric conditions such as temperature humidity and air movement Under laboratory conditions the half life will average 1500 minutes 25 hours in still air at room temperature 24 C zero humidity with zero air changes per hour 33 2 O 3 3 O 2 displaystyle ce 2 O3 gt 3 O2 nbsp This reaction proceeds more rapidly with increasing temperature Deflagration of ozone can be triggered by a spark and can occur in ozone concentrations of 10 wt or higher 34 Ozone can also be produced from oxygen at the anode of an electrochemical cell This reaction can create smaller quantities of ozone for research purposes 35 O 3 g 2 H 2 e O 2 g H 2 O E 2 075 V displaystyle ce O3 g 2H 2e lt gt O2 g H2O quad E circ text 2 075 V nbsp 36 This can be observed as an unwanted reaction in a Hoffman gas apparatus during the electrolysis of water when the voltage is set above the necessary voltage With metals edit Ozone will oxidize most metals except gold platinum and iridium to oxides of the metals in their highest oxidation state For example Cu O 3 CuO O 2 Ag O 3 AgO O 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp ce Cu O3 gt CuO O2 amp ce Ag O3 gt AgO O2 end aligned nbsp With nitrogen and carbon compounds edit Ozone also oxidizes nitric oxide to nitrogen dioxide NO O 3 NO 2 O 2 displaystyle ce NO O3 gt NO2 O2 nbsp This reaction is accompanied by chemiluminescence The NO2 can be further oxidized to nitrate radical NO 2 O 3 NO 3 O 2 displaystyle ce NO2 O3 gt NO3 O2 nbsp The NO3 formed can react with NO2 to form dinitrogen pentoxide N2O5 Solid nitronium perchlorate can be made from NO2 ClO2 and O3 gases NO 2 ClO 2 2 O 3 NO 2 ClO 4 2 O 2 displaystyle ce NO2 ClO2 2 O3 gt NO2ClO4 2 O2 nbsp Ozone does not react with ammonium salts but it oxidizes ammonia to ammonium nitrate 2 NH 3 4 O 3 NH 4 NO 3 4 O 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce 2 NH3 4 O3 gt NH4NO3 4 O2 H2O nbsp Ozone reacts with carbon to form carbon dioxide even at room temperature C 2 O 3 CO 2 2 O 2 displaystyle ce C 2 O3 gt CO2 2 O2 nbsp With sulfur compounds edit Ozone oxidizes sulfides to sulfates For example lead II sulfide is oxidized to lead II sulfate PbS 4 O 3 PbSO 4 4 O 2 displaystyle ce PbS 4 O3 gt PbSO4 4 O2 nbsp Sulfuric acid can be produced from ozone water and either elemental sulfur or sulfur dioxide S H 2 O O 3 H 2 SO 4 3 SO 2 3 H 2 O O 3 3 H 2 SO 4 displaystyle begin aligned amp ce S H2O O3 gt H2SO4 amp ce 3 SO2 3 H2O O3 gt 3 H2SO4 end aligned nbsp In the gas phase ozone reacts with hydrogen sulfide to form sulfur dioxide H 2 S O 3 SO 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce H2S O3 gt SO2 H2O nbsp In an aqueous solution however two competing simultaneous reactions occur one to produce elemental sulfur and one to produce sulfuric acid H 2 S O 3 S O 2 H 2 O 3 H 2 S 4 O 3 3 H 2 SO 4 displaystyle begin aligned amp ce H2S O3 gt S O2 H2O amp ce 3 H2S 4 O3 gt 3 H2SO4 end aligned nbsp With alkenes and alkynes edit Main article ozonolysis Alkenes can be oxidatively cleaved by ozone in a process called ozonolysis giving alcohols aldehydes ketones and carboxylic acids depending on the second step of the workup nbsp General reaction equation of ozonolysisOzone can also cleave alkynes to form an acid anhydride or diketone product 37 If the reaction is performed in the presence of water the anhydride hydrolyzes to give two carboxylic acids nbsp Usually ozonolysis is carried out in a solution of dichloromethane at a temperature of 78 C After a sequence of cleavage and rearrangement an organic ozonide is formed With reductive workup e g zinc in acetic acid or dimethyl sulfide ketones and aldehydes will be formed with oxidative workup e g aqueous or alcoholic hydrogen peroxide carboxylic acids will be formed 38 Other substrates edit All three atoms of ozone may also react as in the reaction of tin II chloride with hydrochloric acid and ozone 3 SnCl 2 6 HCl O 3 3 SnCl 4 3 H 2 O displaystyle ce 3 SnCl2 6 HCl O3 gt 3 SnCl4 3 H2O nbsp Iodine perchlorate can be made by treating iodine dissolved in cold anhydrous perchloric acid with ozone I 2 6 HClO 4 O 3 2 I ClO 4 3 3 H 2 O displaystyle ce I2 6 HClO4 O3 gt 2 I ClO4 3 3 H2O nbsp Ozone could also react with potassium iodide to give oxygen and iodine gas that can be titrated for quantitative determination 39 2 KI O 3 H 2 O 2 KOH O 2 I 2 displaystyle ce 2KI O3 H2O gt 2KOH O2 I2 nbsp Combustion edit Ozone can be used for combustion reactions and combustible gases ozone provides higher temperatures than burning in dioxygen O2 The following is a reaction for the combustion of carbon subnitride which can also cause higher temperatures 3 C 4 N 2 4 O 3 12 CO 3 N 2 displaystyle ce 3 C4N2 4 O3 gt 12 CO 3 N2 nbsp Ozone can react at cryogenic temperatures At 77 K 196 2 C 321 1 F atomic hydrogen reacts with liquid ozone to form a hydrogen superoxide radical which dimerizes 40 H O 3 HO 2 O 2 HO 2 H 2 O 4 displaystyle begin aligned amp ce H O3 gt HO2 O amp ce 2 HO2 gt H2O4 end aligned nbsp Ozone decomposition edit Types of ozone decomposition edit Ozone is a toxic substance 41 42 commonly found or generated in human environments aircraft cabins offices with photocopiers laser printers sterilizers and its catalytic decomposition is very important to reduce pollution This type of decomposition is the most widely used especially with solid catalysts and it has many advantages such as a higher conversion with a lower temperature Furthermore the product and the catalyst can be instantaneously separated and this way the catalyst can be easily recovered without using any separation operation Moreover the most used materials in the catalytic decomposition of ozone in the gas phase are noble metals like Pt Rh or Pd and transition metals such as Mn Co Cu Fe Ni or Ag There are two other possibilities for the ozone decomposition in gas phase The first one is a thermal decomposition where the ozone can be decomposed using only the action of heat The problem is that this type of decomposition is very slow with temperatures below 250 C However the decomposition rate can be increased working with higher temperatures but this would involve a high energy cost The second one is a photochemical decomposition which consists of radiating ozone with ultraviolet radiation UV and it gives rise to oxygen and radical peroxide 43 Kinetics of ozone decomposition into molecular oxygen edit The process of ozone decomposition is a complex reaction involving two elementary reactions that finally lead to molecular oxygen and this means that the reaction order and the rate law cannot be determined by the stoichiometry of the fitted equation Overall reaction 2 O 3 3 O 2 displaystyle ce 2 O3 gt 3 O2 nbsp Rate law observed V K O 3 2 O 2 displaystyle V frac K cdot ce O3 2 ce O2 nbsp It has been determined that the ozone decomposition follows a first order kinetics and from the rate law above it can be determined that the partial order respect to molecular oxygen is 1 and respect to ozone is 2 therefore the global reaction order is 1 The ozone decomposition consists of two elementary steps The first one corresponds to a unimolecular reaction because one only molecule of ozone decomposes into two products molecular oxygen and oxygen 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 Step 1 Unimolecular reaction O 3 O 2 O displaystyle ce O3 gt O2 O nbsp Step 2 Bimolecular reaction O 3 O 2 O 2 displaystyle ce O3 O gt 2 O2 nbsp These two steps have different reaction rates the first one is reversible and faster than the second reaction which is slower so this means that the determining step is the second reaction and this is used to determine the observed reaction rate The reaction rate laws for every step are the ones that follow V 1 K 1 O 3 V 2 K 2 O O 3 displaystyle V 1 K 1 cdot ce O3 qquad V 2 K 2 cdot ce O cdot ce O3 nbsp The following mechanism allows to explain the rate law of the ozone decomposition observed experimentally and also it allows to determine the reaction orders with respect to ozone and oxygen with which the overall reaction order will be determined The slower step the bimolecular reaction is the one that determines the rate of product formation and considering that this step gives rise to two oxygen molecules the rate law has this form V 2 K 2 O O 3 displaystyle V 2K 2 cdot ce O cdot ce O3 nbsp However this equation depends on the concentration of oxygen intermediate which can be determined considering the first step Since the first step is faster and reversible and the second step is slower the reactants and products from the first step are in equilibrium so the concentration of the intermediate can be determined as follows K 1 K 1 K 1 O 2 O O 3 displaystyle K 1 frac K 1 K 1 frac ce O2 cdot ce O ce O3 nbsp O K 1 O 3 K 1 O 2 displaystyle ce O frac K 1 cdot ce O3 K 1 cdot ce O2 nbsp Then using these equations the formation rate of molecular oxygen is as shown below V 2 K 2 K 1 O 3 2 K 1 O 2 displaystyle V 2K 2 cdot K 1 cdot ce O 3 2 over K 1 cdot ce O 2 nbsp Finally the mechanism presented allows to establish the rate observed experimentally with a rate constant Kobs and corresponding to a first order kinetics as follows 44 V K obs O 3 2 O 2 K obs O 3 2 O 2 1 displaystyle V K text obs cdot ce O 3 2 over ce O 2 K text obs cdot ce O 3 2 cdot ce O 2 1 nbsp where K obs 2 K 2 K 1 K 1 displaystyle K text obs 2K 2 cdot K 1 over K 1 nbsp Reduction to ozonides edit Reduction of ozone gives the ozonide anion O 3 Derivatives of this anion are explosive and must be stored at cryogenic temperatures Ozonides for all the alkali metals are known KO3 RbO3 and CsO3 can be prepared from their respective superoxides KO 2 O 3 KO 3 O 2 displaystyle ce KO2 O3 gt KO3 O2 nbsp Although KO3 can be formed as above it can also be formed from potassium hydroxide and ozone 45 2 KOH 5 O 3 2 KO 3 5 O 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce 2 KOH 5 O3 gt 2 KO3 5 O2 H2O nbsp NaO3 and LiO3 must be prepared by action of CsO3 in liquid NH3 on an ion exchange resin containing Na or Li ions 46 CsO 3 Na Cs NaO 3 displaystyle ce CsO3 Na gt Cs NaO3 nbsp A solution of calcium in ammonia reacts with ozone to give ammonium ozonide and not calcium ozonide 40 3 Ca 10 NH 3 6 O 3 Ca 6 NH 3 Ca OH 2 Ca NO 3 2 2 NH 4 O 3 2 O 2 H 2 displaystyle begin aligned ce 3 Ca 10 NH3 6 O3 gt amp ce Ca 6NH3 Ca OH 2 Ca NO3 2 amp ce 2 NH4O3 2 O2 H2 end aligned nbsp Applications edit Ozone can be used to remove iron and manganese from water forming a precipitate which can be filtered 2 Fe 2 O 3 5 H 2 O 2 Fe OH 3 s O 2 4 H 2 Mn 2 2 O 3 4 H 2 O 2 MnO OH 2 s 2 O 2 4 H displaystyle begin aligned amp ce 2 Fe 2 O3 5 H2O gt 2 Fe OH 3 s O2 4 H amp ce 2 Mn 2 2 O3 4 H2O gt 2 MnO OH 2 s 2 O2 4 H end aligned nbsp Ozone will also oxidize dissolved hydrogen sulfide in water to sulfurous acid 3 O 3 H 2 S H 2 SO 3 3 O 2 displaystyle ce 3 O3 H2S gt H2SO3 3 O2 nbsp These three reactions are central in the use of ozone based well water treatment Ozone will also detoxify cyanides by converting them to cyanates CN O 3 CNO O 2 displaystyle ce CN O3 gt CNO O2 nbsp Ozone will also completely decompose urea 47 NH 2 2 CO O 3 N 2 CO 2 2 H 2 O displaystyle ce NH2 2CO O3 gt N2 CO2 2 H2O nbsp Spectroscopic properties editOzone is a bent triatomic molecule with three vibrational modes the symmetric stretch 1103 157 cm 1 bend 701 42 cm 1 and antisymmetric stretch 1042 096 cm 1 48 The symmetric stretch and bend are weak absorbers but the antisymmetric stretch is strong and responsible for ozone being an important minor greenhouse gas This IR band is also used to detect ambient and atmospheric ozone although UV based measurements are more common 49 The electromagnetic spectrum of ozone is quite complex An overview can be seen at the MPI Mainz UV VIS Spectral Atlas of Gaseous Molecules of Atmospheric Interest 50 All of the bands are dissociative meaning that the molecule falls apart to O O2 after absorbing a photon The most important absorption is the Hartley band extending from slightly above 300 nm down to slightly above 200 nm It is this band that is responsible for absorbing UV C in the stratosphere On the high wavelength side the Hartley band transitions to the so called Huggins band which falls off rapidly until disappearing by 360 nm Above 400 nm extending well out into the NIR are the Chappius and Wulf bands There unstructured absorption bands are useful for detecting high ambient concentrations of ozone but are so weak that they do not have much practical effect There are additional absorption bands in the far UV which increase slowly from 200 nm down to reaching a maximum at 120 nm Ozone in Earth s atmosphere edit nbsp The distribution of atmospheric ozone in partial pressure as a function of altitude nbsp Concentration of ozone as measured by the Nimbus 7 satellite nbsp Total ozone concentration in June 2000 as measured by the NASA EP TOMS satellite instrumentThe standard way to express total ozone levels the amount of ozone in a given vertical column in the atmosphere is by using Dobson units Point measurements are reported as mole fractions in nmol mol parts per billion ppb or as concentrations in mg m3 The study of ozone concentration in the atmosphere started in the 1920s 51 Ozone layer edit Main article Ozone layer Location and production edit See also Ozone oxygen cycle and Ozone depletion The highest levels of ozone in the atmosphere are in the stratosphere in a region also known as the ozone layer between about 10 and 50 km above the surface or between about 6 and 31 miles However even in this layer the ozone concentrations are only two to eight parts per million so most of the oxygen there is dioxygen O2 at about 210 000 parts per million by volume 52 Ozone in the stratosphere is mostly produced from short wave ultraviolet rays between 240 and 160 nm Oxygen starts to absorb weakly at 240 nm in the Herzberg bands but most of the oxygen is dissociated by absorption in the strong Schumann Runge bands between 200 and 160 nm where ozone does not absorb While shorter wavelength light extending to even the X Ray limit is energetic enough to dissociate molecular oxygen there is relatively little of it and the strong solar emission at Lyman alpha 121 nm falls at a point where molecular oxygen absorption is a minimum 53 The process of ozone creation and destruction is called the Chapman cycle and starts with the photolysis of molecular oxygen O 2 radiation l lt 240 nm photon 2 O displaystyle ce O2 gt ce photon ce radiation lambda lt 240 ce nm 2O nbsp followed by reaction of the oxygen atom with another molecule of oxygen to form ozone O O 2 M O 3 M displaystyle ce O O2 M gt O3 M nbsp where M denotes the third body that carries off the excess energy of the reaction The ozone molecule can then absorb a UV C photon and dissociate O 3 O O 2 kinetic energy displaystyle ce O3 gt O O2 text kinetic energy nbsp The excess kinetic energy heats the stratosphere when the O atoms and the molecular oxygen fly apart and collide with other molecules This conversion of UV light into kinetic energy warms the stratosphere The oxygen atoms produced in the photolysis of ozone then react back with other oxygen molecule as in the previous step to form more ozone In the clear atmosphere with only nitrogen and oxygen ozone can react with the atomic oxygen to form two molecules of O2 O 3 O 2 O 2 displaystyle ce O3 O gt 2 O2 nbsp An estimate of the rate of this termination step to the cycling of atomic oxygen back to ozone can be found simply by taking the ratios of the concentration of O2 to O3 The termination reaction is catalysed by the presence of certain free radicals of which the most important are hydroxyl OH nitric oxide NO and atomic chlorine Cl and bromine Br In the second half of the 20th century the amount of ozone in the stratosphere was discovered to be declining mostly because of increasing concentrations of chlorofluorocarbons CFC and similar chlorinated and brominated organic molecules The concern over the health effects of the decline led to the 1987 Montreal Protocol the ban on the production of many ozone depleting chemicals and in the first and second decade of the 21st century the beginning of the recovery of stratospheric ozone concentrations Importance to surface dwelling life on Earth edit nbsp Levels of ozone at various altitudes and blocking of different bands of ultraviolet radiation Essentially all UVC 100 280 nm is blocked by dioxygen at 100 200 nm or by ozone at 200 280 nm in the atmosphere The shorter portion of this band and even more energetic UV causes the formation of the ozone layer when single oxygen atoms produced by UV photolysis of dioxygen below 240 nm react with more dioxygen The ozone layer itself then blocks most but not quite all sunburn producing UVB 280 315 nm The band of UV closest to visible light UVA 315 400 nm is hardly affected by ozone and most of it reaches the ground Ozone in the ozone layer filters out sunlight wavelengths from about 200 nm UV rays to 315 nm with ozone peak absorption at about 250 nm 54 This ozone UV absorption is important to life since it extends the absorption of UV by ordinary oxygen and nitrogen in air which absorb all wavelengths lt 200 nm through the lower UV C 200 280 nm and the entire UV B band 280 315 nm The small unabsorbed part that remains of UV B after passage through ozone causes sunburn in humans and direct DNA damage in living tissues in both plants and animals Ozone s effect on mid range UV B rays is illustrated by its effect on UV B at 290 nm which has a radiation intensity 350 million times as powerful at the top of the atmosphere as at the surface Nevertheless enough of UV B radiation at similar frequency reaches the ground to cause some sunburn and these same wavelengths are also among those responsible for the production of vitamin D in humans The ozone layer has little effect on the longer UV wavelengths called UV A 315 400 nm but this radiation does not cause sunburn or direct DNA damage While UV A probably does cause long term skin damage in certain humans it is not as dangerous to plants and to the health of surface dwelling organisms on Earth in general see ultraviolet for more information on near ultraviolet Low level ozone edit Main articles Tropospheric ozone and Photochemical smog Low level ozone or tropospheric ozone is an atmospheric pollutant 55 It is not emitted directly by car engines or by industrial operations but formed by the reaction of sunlight on air containing hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides that react to form ozone directly at the source of the pollution or many kilometers downwind Ozone reacts directly with some hydrocarbons such as aldehydes and thus begins their removal from the air but the products are themselves key components of smog Ozone photolysis by UV light leads to production of the hydroxyl radical HO and this plays a part in the removal of hydrocarbons from the air but is also the first step in the creation of components of smog such as peroxyacyl nitrates which can be powerful eye irritants The atmospheric lifetime of tropospheric ozone is about 22 days its main removal mechanisms are being deposited to the ground the above mentioned reaction giving HO and by reactions with OH and the peroxy radical HO2 56 There is evidence of significant reduction in agricultural yields because of increased ground level ozone and pollution which interferes with photosynthesis and stunts overall growth of some plant species 57 58 The United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA has proposed a secondary regulation to reduce crop damage in addition to the primary regulation designed for the protection of human health Low level ozone in urban areas edit Certain examples of cities with elevated ozone readings are Denver Colorado Houston Texas and Mexico City Mexico Houston has a reading of around 41 nmol mol while Mexico City is far more hazardous with a reading of about 125 nmol mol 58 Low level ozone or tropospheric ozone is the most concerning type of ozone pollution in urban areas and is increasing in general 59 Ozone pollution in urban areas affects denser populations and is worsened by high populations of vehicles which emit pollutants NO2 and VOCs the main contributors to problematic ozone levels 60 Ozone pollution in urban areas is especially concerning with increasing temperatures raising heat related mortality during heat waves 61 During heat waves in urban areas ground level ozone pollution can be 20 higher than usual 62 Ozone pollution in urban areas reaches higher levels of exceedance in the summer and autumn which may be explained by weather patterns and traffic patterns 60 People experiencing poverty are more affected by pollution in general even though these populations are less likely to be contributing to pollution levels 63 As mentioned above Denver Colorado is one of the many cities in the U S that have high amounts of ozone According to the American Lung Association the Denver Aurora area is the 14th most ozone polluted area in the U S 64 The problem of high ozone levels is not new to this area In 2004 the EPA allotted the Denver Metro North Front Range b as non attainment areas per 1997 s 8 hour ozone standard 65 but later deferred this status until 2007 The non attainment standard indicates that an area does not meet the EPA s air quality standards The Colorado Ozone Action Plan was created in response and numerous changes were implemented from this plan The first major change was that car emission testing was expanded across the state to more counties that did not previously mandate emissions testing like areas of Larimer and Weld County There have also been changes made to decrease Nitrogen Oxides NOx and Volatile Organic Compound VOC emissions which should help lower ozone levels One large contributor to high ozone levels in the area is the oil and natural gas industry situated in the Denver Julesburg Basin DJB which overlaps with a majority of Colorado s metropolitan areas Ozone is created naturally in the Earth s stratosphere but is also created in the troposphere from human efforts Briefly mentioned above NOx and VOCs react with sunlight to create ozone through a process called photochemistry One hour elevated ozone events lt 75 ppb occur during June August indicating that elevated ozone levels are driven by regional photochemistry 66 According to an article from the University of Colorado Boulder Oil and natural gas VOC emission have a major role in ozone production and bear the potential to contribute to elevated O3 levels in the Northern Colorado Front Range NCFR 66 Using complex analyses to research wind patterns and emissions from large oil and natural gas operations the authors concluded that elevated O3 levels in the NCFR are predominantly correlated with air transport from N ESE which are the upwind sectors where the O amp NG operations in the Wattenberg Field area of the DJB are located 66 Contained in the Colorado Ozone Action Plan created in 2008 plans exist to evaluate emission controls for large industrial sources of NOx and statewide control requirements for new oil and gas condensate tanks and pneumatic valves 67 In 2011 the Regional Haze Plan was released that included a more specific plan to help decrease NOx emissions These efforts are increasingly difficult to implement and take many years to come to pass Of course there are also other reasons that ozone levels remain high These include a growing population meaning more car emissions and the mountains along the NCFR that can trap emissions If interested daily air quality readings can be found at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment s website 68 As noted earlier Denver continues to experience high levels of ozone to this day It will take many years and a systems thinking approach to combat this issue of high ozone levels in the Front Range of Colorado Ozone cracking edit Main article Ozone cracking nbsp Ozone cracking in natural rubber tubingOzone gas attacks any polymer possessing olefinic or double bonds within its chain structure such as natural rubber nitrile rubber and styrene butadiene rubber Products made using these polymers are especially susceptible to attack which causes cracks to grow longer and deeper with time the rate of crack growth depending on the load carried by the rubber component and the concentration of ozone in the atmosphere Such materials can be protected by adding antiozonants such as waxes which bond to the surface to create a protective film or blend with the material and provide long term protection Ozone cracking used to be a serious problem in car tires 69 for example but it is not an issue with modern tires On the other hand many critical products like gaskets and O rings may be attacked by ozone produced within compressed air systems Fuel lines made of reinforced rubber are also susceptible to attack especially within the engine compartment where some ozone is produced by electrical components Storing rubber products in close proximity to a DC electric motor can accelerate ozone cracking The commutator of the motor generates sparks which in turn produce ozone Ozone as a greenhouse gas edit Although ozone was present at ground level before the Industrial Revolution peak concentrations are now far higher than the pre industrial levels and even background concentrations well away from sources of pollution are substantially higher 70 71 Ozone acts as a greenhouse gas absorbing some of the infrared energy emitted by the earth Quantifying the greenhouse gas potency of ozone is difficult because it is not present in uniform concentrations across the globe However the most widely accepted scientific assessments relating to climate change e g the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Third Assessment Report 72 suggest that the radiative forcing of tropospheric ozone is about 25 that of carbon dioxide The annual global warming potential of tropospheric ozone is between 918 and 1022 tons carbon dioxide equivalent tons tropospheric ozone This means on a per molecule basis ozone in the troposphere has a radiative forcing effect roughly 1 000 times as strong as carbon dioxide However tropospheric ozone is a short lived greenhouse gas which decays in the atmosphere much more quickly than carbon dioxide This means that over a 20 year span the global warming potential of tropospheric ozone is much less roughly 62 to 69 tons carbon dioxide equivalent ton tropospheric ozone 73 Because of its short lived nature tropospheric ozone does not have strong global effects but has very strong radiative forcing effects on regional scales In fact there are regions of the world where tropospheric ozone has a radiative forcing up to 150 of carbon dioxide 74 For example ozone increase in the troposphere is shown to be responsible for 30 of upper Southern Ocean interior warming between 1955 and 2000 75 Health effects editSee also Environmental impact of the coal industry For the last few decades scientists studied the effects of acute and chronic ozone exposure on human health Hundreds of studies suggest that ozone is harmful to people at levels currently found in urban areas 76 77 Ozone has been shown to affect the respiratory cardiovascular and central nervous system Early death and problems in reproductive health and development are also shown to be associated with ozone exposure 78 Vulnerable populations edit The American Lung Association has identified five populations who are especially vulnerable to the effects of breathing ozone 79 Children and teens People 65 years old and older People who work or exercise outdoors People with existing lung diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease also known as COPD which includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis People with cardiovascular diseaseAdditional evidence suggests that women those with obesity and low income populations may also face higher risk from ozone although more research is needed 79 Acute ozone exposure edit Acute ozone exposure ranges from hours to a few days Because ozone is a gas it directly affects the lungs and the entire respiratory system Inhaled ozone causes inflammation and acute but reversible changes in lung function as well as airway hyperresponsiveness 80 These changes lead to shortness of breath wheezing and coughing which may exacerbate lung diseases like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease COPD resulting in the need to receive medical treatment 81 82 Acute and chronic exposure to ozone has been shown to cause an increased risk of respiratory infections due to the following mechanism 83 Multiple studies have been conducted to determine the mechanism behind ozone s harmful effects particularly in the lungs These studies have shown that exposure to ozone causes changes in the immune response within the lung tissue resulting in disruption of both the innate and adaptive immune response as well as altering the protective function of lung epithelial cells 84 It is thought that these changes in immune response and the related inflammatory response are factors that likely contribute to the increased risk of lung infections and worsening or triggering of asthma and reactive airways after exposure to ground level ozone pollution 84 85 The innate cellular immune system consists of various chemical signals and cell types that work broadly and against multiple pathogen types typically bacteria or foreign bodies substances in the host 85 86 The cells of the innate system include phagocytes neutrophils 86 both thought to contribute to the mechanism of ozone pathology in the lungs as the functioning of these cell types have been shown to change after exposure to ozone 85 Macrophages cells that serve the purpose of eliminating pathogens or foreign material through the process of phagocytosis 86 have been shown to change the level of inflammatory signals they release in response to ozone either up regulating and resulting in an inflammatory response in the lung or down regulating and reducing immune protection 84 Neutrophils another important cell type of the innate immune system that primarily targets bacterial pathogens 86 are found to be present in the airways within 6 hours of exposure to high ozone levels Despite high levels in the lung tissues however their ability to clear bacteria appears impaired by exposure to ozone 84 The adaptive immune system is the branch of immunity that provides long term protection via the development of antibodies targeting specific pathogens and is also impacted by high ozone exposure 85 86 Lymphocytes a cellular component of the adaptive immune response produce an increased amount of inflammatory chemicals called cytokines after exposure to ozone which may contribute to airway hyperreactivity and worsening asthma symptoms 84 The airway epithelial cells also play an important role in protecting individuals from pathogens In normal tissue the epithelial layer forms a protective barrier and also contains specialized ciliary structures that work to clear foreign bodies mucus and pathogens from the lungs When exposed to ozone the cilia become damaged and mucociliary clearance of pathogens is reduced Furthermore the epithelial barrier becomes weakened allowing pathogens to cross the barrier proliferate and spread into deeper tissues Together these changes in the epithelial barrier help make individuals more susceptible to pulmonary infections 84 Inhaling ozone not only affects the immune system and lungs but it may also affect the heart as well Ozone causes short term autonomic imbalance leading to changes in heart rate and reduction in heart rate variability 87 and high levels exposure for as little as one hour results in a supraventricular arrhythmia in the elderly 88 both increase the risk of premature death and stroke Ozone may also lead to vasoconstriction resulting in increased systemic arterial pressure contributing to increased risk of cardiac morbidity and mortality in patients with pre existing cardiac diseases 89 90 Chronic ozone exposure edit Breathing ozone for periods longer than eight hours at a time for weeks months or years defines chronic exposure Numerous studies suggest a serious impact on the health of various populations from this exposure One study finds significant positive associations between chronic ozone and all cause circulatory and respiratory mortality with 2 3 and 12 increases in risk per 10 ppb 91 and report an association 95 CI of annual ozone and all cause mortality with a hazard ratio of 1 02 1 01 1 04 and with cardiovascular mortality of 1 03 1 01 1 05 A similar study finds similar associations with all cause mortality and even larger effects for cardiovascular mortality 92 An increased risk of mortality from respiratory causes is associated with long term chronic exposure to ozone 93 Chronic ozone has detrimental effects on children especially those with asthma The risk for hospitalization in children with asthma increases with chronic exposure to ozone younger children and those with low income status are even at greater risk 94 Adults suffering from respiratory diseases asthma 95 COPD 96 lung cancer 97 are at a higher risk of mortality and morbidity and critically ill patients have an increased risk of developing acute respiratory distress syndrome with chronic ozone exposure as well 98 Ozone produced by air cleaners edit Ozone generators sold as air cleaners intentionally produce the gas ozone 42 These are often marketed to control indoor air pollution and use misleading terms to describe ozone Some examples are describing it as energized oxygen or pure air suggesting that ozone is a healthy or better kind of oxygen 42 However according to the EPA There is evidence to show that at concentrations that do not exceed public health standards ozone is not effective at removing many odor causing chemicals and If used at concentrations that do not exceed public health standards ozone applied to indoor air does not effectively remove viruses bacteria mold or other biological pollutants 42 Furthermore another report states that results of some controlled studies show that concentrations of ozone considerably higher than these human safety standards are possible even when a user follows the manufacturer s operating instructions 99 The California Air Resources Board has a page listing air cleaners many with ionizers meeting their indoor ozone limit of 0 050 parts per million 100 From that article All portable indoor air cleaning devices sold in California must be certified by the California Air Resources Board CARB To be certified air cleaners must be tested for electrical safety and ozone emissions and meet an ozone emission concentration limit of 0 050 parts per million For more information about the regulation visit the air cleaner regulation Ozone air pollution edit Further information Ground level ozone and Climate change nbsp Red Alder leaf showing discolouration caused by ozone pollution 101 nbsp Signboard in Gulfton Houston indicating an ozone watchOzone precursors are a group of pollutants predominantly those emitted during the combustion of fossil fuels Ground level ozone pollution tropospheric ozone is created near the Earth s surface by the action of daylight UV rays on these precursors The ozone at ground level is primarily from fossil fuel precursors but methane is a natural precursor and the very low natural background level of ozone at ground level is considered safe This section examines the health impacts of fossil fuel burning which raises ground level ozone far above background levels There is a great deal of evidence to show that ground level ozone can harm lung function and irritate the respiratory system 55 102 Exposure to ozone and the pollutants that produce it is linked to premature death asthma bronchitis heart attack and other cardiopulmonary problems 103 104 Long term exposure to ozone has been shown to increase risk of death from respiratory illness 42 A study of 450 000 people living in U S cities saw a significant correlation between ozone levels and respiratory illness over the 18 year follow up period The study revealed that people living in cities with high ozone levels such as Houston or Los Angeles had an over 30 increased risk of dying from lung disease 105 106 Air quality guidelines such as those from the World Health Organization the U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA and the European Union are based on detailed studies designed to identify the levels that can cause measurable ill health effects According to scientists with the EPA susceptible people can be adversely affected by ozone levels as low as 40 nmol mol 104 107 108 In the EU the current target value for ozone concentrations is 120 µg m3 which is about 60 nmol mol This target applies to all member states in accordance with Directive 2008 50 EC 109 Ozone concentration is measured as a maximum daily mean of 8 hour averages and the target should not be exceeded on more than 25 calendar days per year starting from January 2010 Whilst the directive requires in the future a strict compliance with 120 µg m3 limit i e mean ozone concentration not to be exceeded on any day of the year there is no date set for this requirement and this is treated as a long term objective 110 In the US the Clean Air Act directs the EPA to set National Ambient Air Quality Standards for several pollutants including ground level ozone and counties out of compliance with these standards are required to take steps to reduce their levels In May 2008 under a court order the EPA lowered its ozone standard from 80 nmol mol to 75 nmol mol The move proved controversial since the Agency s own scientists and advisory board had recommended lowering the standard to 60 nmol mol 104 Many public health and environmental groups also supported the 60 nmol mol standard 111 and the World Health Organization recommends 100 µg m3 51 nmol mol 112 On January 7 2010 the U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA announced proposed revisions to the National Ambient Air Quality Standard NAAQS for the pollutant ozone the principal component of smog EPA proposes that the level of the 8 hour primary standard which was set at 0 075 mmol mol in the 2008 final rule should instead be set at a lower level within the range of 0 060 to 0 070 mmol mol to provide increased protection for children and other at risk populations against an array of O3 related adverse health effects that range from decreased lung function and increased respiratory symptoms to serious indicators of respiratory morbidity including emergency department visits and hospital admissions for respiratory causes and possibly cardiovascular related morbidity as well as total non accidental and cardiopulmonary mortality 113 On October 26 2015 the EPA published a final rule with an effective date of December 28 2015 that revised the 8 hour primary NAAQS from 0 075 ppm to 0 070 ppm 114 The EPA has developed an air quality index AQI to help explain air pollution levels to the general public Under the current standards eight hour average ozone mole fractions of 85 to 104 nmol mol are described as unhealthy for sensitive groups 105 nmol mol to 124 nmol mol as unhealthy and 125 nmol mol to 404 nmol mol as very unhealthy 115 Ozone can also be present in indoor air pollution partly as a result of electronic equipment such as photocopiers A connection has also been known to exist between the increased pollen fungal spores and ozone caused by thunderstorms and hospital admissions of asthma sufferers 116 In the Victorian era one British folk myth held that the smell of the sea was caused by ozone In fact the characteristic smell of the sea is caused by dimethyl sulfide a chemical generated by phytoplankton Victorian Britons considered the resulting smell bracing 117 Heat waves edit An investigation to assess the joint mortality effects of ozone and heat during the European heat waves in 2003 concluded that these appear to be additive 118 Physiology edit See also Trioxidane Ozone along with reactive forms of oxygen such as superoxide singlet oxygen hydrogen peroxide and hypochlorite ions is produced by white blood cells and other biological systems such as the roots of marigolds as a means of destroying foreign bodies Ozone reacts directly with organic double bonds Also when ozone breaks down to dioxygen it gives rise to oxygen free radicals which are highly reactive and capable of damaging many organic molecules Moreover it is believed that the powerful oxidizing properties of ozone may be a contributing factor of inflammation The cause and effect relationship of how the ozone is created in the body and what it does is still under consideration and still subject to various interpretations since other body chemical processes can trigger some of the same reactions There is evidence linking the antibody catalyzed water oxidation pathway of the human immune response to the production of ozone In this system ozone is produced by antibody catalyzed production of trioxidane from water and neutrophil produced singlet oxygen 119 When inhaled ozone reacts with compounds lining the lungs to form specific cholesterol derived metabolites that are thought to facilitate the build up and pathogenesis of atherosclerotic plaques a form of heart disease These metabolites have been confirmed as naturally occurring in human atherosclerotic arteries and are categorized into a class of secosterols termed atheronals generated by ozonolysis of cholesterol s double bond to form a 5 6 secosterol 120 as well as a secondary condensation product via aldolization 121 Impact on plant growth and crop yields edit Ozone has been implicated to have an adverse effect on plant growth ozone reduced total chlorophylls carotenoid and carbohydrate concentration and increased 1 aminocyclopropane 1 carboxylic acid ACC content and ethylene production In treated plants the ascorbate leaf pool was decreased while lipid peroxidation and solute leakage were significantly higher than in ozone free controls The data indicated that ozone triggered protective mechanisms against oxidative stress in citrus 122 Studies that have used pepper plants as a model have shown that ozone decreased fruit yield and changed fruit quality 123 124 Furthermore it was also observed a decrease in chlorophylls levels and antioxidant defences on the leaves as well as increased the reactive oxygen species ROS levels and lipid and protein damages 123 124 A 2022 study concludes that East Asia loses 63 billion dollars in crops per year due to ozone pollution a byproduct of fossil fuel combustion China loses about one third of its potential wheat production and one fourth of its rice production 125 126 Safety regulations edit Because of the strongly oxidizing properties of ozone ozone is a primary irritant affecting especially the eyes and respiratory systems and can be hazardous at even low concentrations The Canadian Centre for Occupation Safety and Health reports that Even very low concentrations of ozone can be harmful to the upper respiratory tract and the lungs The severity of injury depends on both the concentration of ozone and the duration of exposure Severe and permanent lung injury or death could result from even a very short term exposure to relatively low concentrations 127 To protect workers potentially exposed to ozone U S Occupational Safety and Health Administration has established a permissible exposure limit PEL of 0 1 mmol mol 29 CFR 1910 1000 table Z 1 calculated as an 8 hour time weighted average Higher concentrations are especially hazardous and NIOSH has established an Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health Limit IDLH of 5 mmol mol 128 Work environments where ozone is used or where it is likely to be produced should have adequate ventilation and it is prudent to have a monitor for ozone that will alarm if the concentration exceeds the OSHA PEL Continuous monitors for ozone are available from several suppliers Elevated ozone exposure can occur on passenger aircraft with levels depending on altitude and atmospheric turbulence 129 U S Federal Aviation Administration regulations set a limit of 250 nmol mol with a maximum four hour average of 100 nmol mol 130 Some planes are equipped with ozone converters in the ventilation system to reduce passenger exposure 129 Production edit nbsp Ozone production demonstration Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory 1926Ozone generators or ozonators 131 are used to produce ozone for cleaning air or removing smoke odours in unoccupied rooms These ozone generators can produce over 3 g of ozone per hour Ozone often forms in nature under conditions where O2 will not react 28 Ozone used in industry is measured in mmol mol ppm parts per million nmol mol ppb parts per billion mg m3 mg h milligrams per hour or weight percent The regime of applied concentrations ranges from 1 to 5 in air and from 6 to 14 in oxygen for older generation methods New electrolytic methods can achieve up 20 to 30 dissolved ozone concentrations in output water Temperature and humidity play a large role in how much ozone is being produced using traditional generation methods such as corona discharge and ultraviolet light Old generation methods will produce less than 50 of nominal capacity if operated with humid ambient air as opposed to very dry air New generators using electrolytic methods can achieve higher purity and dissolution through using water molecules as the source of ozone production Coronal discharge method edit nbsp A homemade ozone generator Ozone is produced in the corona discharge This is the most common type of ozone generator for most industrial and personal uses While variations of the hot spark coronal discharge method of ozone production exist including medical grade and industrial grade ozone generators these units usually work by means of a corona discharge tube or ozone plate 132 133 They are typically cost effective and do not require an oxygen source other than the ambient air to produce ozone concentrations of 3 6 Fluctuations in ambient air due to weather or other environmental conditions cause variability in ozone production However they also produce nitrogen oxides as a by product Use of an air dryer can reduce or eliminate nitric acid formation by removing water vapor and increase ozone production At room temperature nitric acid will form into a vapour that is hazardous if inhaled Symptoms can include chest pain shortness of breath headaches and a dry nose and throat causing a burning sensation Use of an oxygen concentrator can further increase the ozone production and further reduce the risk of nitric acid formation by removing not only the water vapor but also the bulk of the nitrogen Ultraviolet light edit See also Photochemistry UV ozone generators or vacuum ultraviolet VUV ozone generators employ a light source that generates a narrow band ultraviolet light a subset of that produced by the Sun The Sun s UV sustains the ozone layer in the stratosphere of Earth 134 UV ozone generators use ambient air for ozone production no air prep systems are used air dryer or oxygen concentrator therefore these generators tend to be less expensive However UV ozone generators usually produce ozone with a concentration of about 0 5 or lower which limits the potential ozone production rate Another disadvantage of this method is that it requires the ambient air oxygen to be exposed to the UV source for a longer amount of time and any gas that is not exposed to the UV source will not be treated This makes UV generators impractical for use in situations that deal with rapidly moving air or water streams in duct air sterilization for example Production of ozone is one of the potential dangers of ultraviolet germicidal irradiation VUV ozone generators are used in swimming pools and spa applications ranging to millions of gallons of water VUV ozone generators unlike corona discharge generators do not produce harmful nitrogen by products and also unlike corona discharge systems VUV ozone generators work extremely well in humid air environments There is also not normally a need for expensive off gas mechanisms and no need for air driers or oxygen concentrators which require extra costs and maintenance Cold plasma edit In the cold plasma method pure oxygen gas is exposed to a plasma created by DBD The diatomic oxygen is split into single atoms which then recombine in triplets to form ozone It is common in the industry to mislabel some DBD ozone generators as CD Corona Discharge generators Typically all solid flat metal electrode ozone generators produce ozone using the dielectric barrier discharge method Cold plasma machines use pure oxygen as the input source and produce a maximum concentration of about 24 ozone They produce far greater quantities of ozone in a given time compared to ultraviolet production that has about 2 efficiency The discharges manifest as filamentary transfer of electrons micro discharges in a gap between two electrodes In order to evenly distribute the micro discharges a dielectric insulator must be used to separate the metallic electrodes and to prevent arcing Electrolytic edit Electrolytic ozone generation EOG splits water molecules into H2 O2 and O3 In most EOG methods the hydrogen gas will be removed to leave oxygen and ozone as the only reaction products Therefore EOG can achieve higher dissolution in water without other competing gases found in corona discharge method such as nitrogen gases present in ambient air This method of generation can achieve concentrations of 20 30 and is independent of air quality because water is used as the source material Production of ozone electrolytically is typically unfavorable because of the high overpotential required to produce ozone as compared to oxygen This is why ozone is not produced during typical water electrolysis However it is possible to increase the overpotential of oxygen by careful catalyst selection such that ozone is preferentially produced under electrolysis Catalysts typically chosen for this approach are lead dioxide 135 or boron doped diamond 136 The ozone to oxygen ratio is improved by increasing current density at the anode cooling the electrolyte around the anode close to 0 C using an acidic electrolyte such as dilute sulfuric acid instead of a basic solution and by applying pulsed current instead of DC 137 Special considerations edit Ozone cannot be stored and transported like other industrial gases because it quickly decays into diatomic oxygen and must therefore be produced on site Available ozone generators vary in the arrangement and design of the high voltage electrodes At production capacities higher than 20 kg per hour a gas water tube heat exchanger may be utilized as ground electrode and assembled with tubular high voltage electrodes on the gas side The regime of typical gas pressures is around 2 bars 200 kPa absolute in oxygen and 3 bars 300 kPa absolute in air Several megawatts of electrical power may be installed in large facilities applied as single phase AC current at 50 to 8000 Hz and peak voltages between 3 000 and 20 000 volts Applied voltage is usually inversely related to the applied frequency The dominating parameter influencing ozone generation efficiency is the gas temperature which is controlled by cooling water temperature and or gas velocity The cooler the water the better the ozone synthesis The lower the gas velocity the higher the concentration but the lower the net ozone produced At typical industrial conditions almost 90 of the effective power is dissipated as heat and needs to be removed by a sufficient cooling water flow Because of the high reactivity of ozone only a few materials may be used like stainless steel quality 316L titanium aluminium as long as no moisture is present glass polytetrafluorethylene or polyvinylidene fluoride Viton may be used with the restriction of constant mechanical forces and absence of humidity humidity limitations apply depending on the formulation Hypalon may be used with the restriction that no water comes in contact with it except for normal atmospheric levels Embrittlement or shrinkage is the common mode of failure of elastomers with exposure to ozone Ozone cracking is the common mode of failure of elastomer seals like O rings Silicone rubbers are usually adequate for use as gaskets in ozone concentrations below 1 wt such as in equipment for accelerated aging of rubber samples Incidental production edit Ozone may be formed from O2 by electrical discharges and by action of high energy electromagnetic radiation Unsuppressed arcing in electrical contacts motor brushes or mechanical switches breaks down the chemical bonds of the atmospheric oxygen surrounding the contacts O2 2O Free radicals of oxygen in and around the arc recombine to create ozone O3 138 Certain electrical equipment generate significant levels of ozone This is especially true of devices using high voltages such as ionic air purifiers laser printers photocopiers tasers and arc welders Electric motors using brushes can generate ozone from repeated sparking inside the unit Large motors that use brushes such as those used by elevators or hydraulic pumps will generate more ozone than smaller motors Ozone is similarly formed in the Catatumbo lightning storms phenomenon on the Catatumbo River in Venezuela though ozone s instability makes it dubious that it has any effect on the ozonosphere 139 It is the world s largest single natural generator of ozone lending calls for it to be designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site 140 Laboratory production edit nbsp A laboratory method for the preparation of ozone by using Siemen s Ozoniser In the laboratory ozone can be produced by electrolysis using a 9 volt battery a pencil graphite rod cathode a platinum wire anode and a 3 molar sulfuric acid electrolyte 141 The half cell reactions taking place are 3 H 2 O O 3 6 H 6 e D E 1 53 V 6 H 6 e 3 H 2 D E 0 V 2 H 2 O O 2 4 H 4 e D E 1 23 V displaystyle begin aligned amp ce 3 H2O gt O3 6 H 6 e amp amp Delta E circ text 1 53 V amp ce 6 H 6 e gt 3 H2 amp amp Delta E circ text 0 V amp ce 2 H2O gt O2 4 H 4 e amp amp Delta E circ text 1 23 V end aligned nbsp where E represents the standard electrode potential In the net reaction three equivalents of water are converted into one equivalent of ozone and three equivalents of hydrogen Oxygen formation is a competing reaction It can also be generated by a high voltage arc In its simplest form high voltage AC such as the output of a neon sign transformer is connected to two metal rods with the ends placed sufficiently close to each other to allow an arc The resulting arc will convert atmospheric oxygen to ozone It is often desirable to contain the ozone This can be done with an apparatus consisting of two concentric glass tubes sealed together at the top with gas ports at the top and bottom of the outer tube The inner core should have a length of metal foil inserted into it connected to one side of the power source The other side of the power source should be connected to another piece of foil wrapped around the outer tube A source of dry O2 is applied to the bottom port When high voltage is applied to the foil leads electricity will discharge between the dry dioxygen in the middle and form O3 and O2 which will flow out the top port This is called a Siemen s ozoniser The reaction can be summarized as follows 28 3 O 2 electricity 2 O 3 displaystyle ce 3O2 gt text electricity 2O3 nbsp Applications editIndustry edit The largest use of ozone is in the preparation of pharmaceuticals synthetic lubricants and many other commercially useful organic compounds where it is used to sever carbon carbon bonds 28 It can also be used for bleaching substances and for killing microorganisms in air and water sources 142 Many municipal drinking water systems kill bacteria with ozone instead of the more common chlorine 143 Ozone has a very high oxidation potential 144 Ozone does not form organochlorine compounds nor does it remain in the water after treatment Ozone can form the suspected carcinogen bromate in source water with high bromide concentrations The U S Safe Drinking Water Act mandates that these systems introduce an amount of chlorine to maintain a minimum of 0 2 mmol mol residual free chlorine in the pipes based on results of regular testing Where electrical power is abundant ozone is a cost effective method of treating water since it is produced on demand and does not require transportation and storage of hazardous chemicals Once it has decayed it leaves no taste or odour in drinking water Although low levels of ozone have been advertised to be of some disinfectant use in residential homes the concentration of ozone in dry air required to have a rapid substantial effect on airborne pathogens exceeds safe levels recommended by the U S Occupational Safety and Health Administration and Environmental Protection Agency Humidity control can vastly improve both the killing power of the ozone and the rate at which it decays back to oxygen more humidity allows more effectiveness Spore forms of most pathogens are very tolerant of atmospheric ozone in concentrations at which asthma patients start to have issues In 1908 artificial ozonisation of the Central Line of the London Underground was introduced for aerial disinfection The process was found to be worthwhile but was phased out by 1956 However the beneficial effect was maintained by the ozone created incidentally from the electrical discharges of the train motors see above Incidental production 145 Ozone generators were made available to schools and universities in Wales for the Autumn term 2021 to disinfect classrooms after COVID 19 outbreaks 146 Industrially ozone is used to Disinfect laundry in hospitals food factories care homes etc 147 Disinfect water in place of chlorine 28 Deodorize air and objects such as after a fire This process is extensively used in fabric restoration Kill bacteria on food or on contact surfaces 148 Water intense industries such as breweries and dairy plants can make effective use of dissolved ozone as a replacement to chemical sanitizers such as peracetic acid hypochlorite or heat Disinfect cooling towers and control Legionella with reduced chemical consumption water bleed off and increased performance Sanitize swimming pools and spas Kill insects in stored grain 149 Scrub yeast and mold spores from the air in food processing plants Wash fresh fruits and vegetables to kill yeast mold and bacteria 148 Chemically attack contaminants in water iron arsenic hydrogen sulfide nitrites and complex organics lumped together as colour Provide an aid to flocculation agglomeration of molecules which aids in filtration where the iron and arsenic are removed Manufacture chemical compounds via chemical synthesis 150 Clean and bleach fabrics the former use is utilized in fabric restoration the latter use is patented 151 Act as an antichlor in chlorine based bleaching Assist in processing plastics to allow adhesion of inks Age rubber samples to determine the useful life of a batch of rubber Eradicate water borne parasites such as Giardia lamblia and Cryptosporidium in surface water treatment plants Ozone is a reagent in many organic reactions in the laboratory and in industry Ozonolysis is the cleavage of an alkene to carbonyl compounds Many hospitals around the world use large ozone generators to decontaminate operating rooms between surgeries The rooms are cleaned and then sealed airtight before being filled with ozone which effectively kills or neutralizes all remaining bacteria 152 Ozone is used as an alternative to chlorine or chlorine dioxide in the bleaching of wood pulp 153 It is often used in conjunction with oxygen and hydrogen peroxide to eliminate the need for chlorine containing compounds in the manufacture of high quality white paper 154 Ozone can be used to detoxify cyanide wastes for example from gold and silver mining by oxidizing cyanide to cyanate and eventually to carbon dioxide 155 Water disinfection edit Since the invention of Dielectric Barrier Discharge DBD plasma reactors it has been employed for water treatment with ozone 156 However with cheaper alternative disinfectants like chlorine such applications of DBD ozone water decontamination have been limited by high power consumption and bulky equipment 157 158 Despite this with research revealing the negative impacts of common disinfectants like chlorine with respect to toxic residuals and ineffectiveness in killing certain micro organisms 159 DBD plasma based ozone decontamination is of interest in current available technologies Although ozonation of water with a high concentration of bromide does lead to the formation of undesirable brominated disinfection byproducts unless drinking water is produced by desalination ozonation can generally be applied without concern for these byproducts 158 160 161 162 Advantages of ozone include high thermodynamic oxidation potential less sensitivity to organic material and better tolerance for pH variations while retaining the ability to kill bacteria fungi viruses as well as spores and cysts 163 164 165 Although ozone has been widely accepted in Europe for decades it is sparingly used for decontamination in the U S due to limitations of high power consumption bulky installation and stigma attached with ozone toxicity 157 166 Considering this recent research efforts have been directed towards the study of effective ozone water treatment systems 167 Researchers have looked into lightweight and compact low power surface DBD reactors 168 169 energy efficient volume DBD reactors 170 and low power micro scale DBD reactors 171 172 Such studies can help pave the path to re acceptance of DBD plasma based ozone decontamination of water especially in the U S Consumers edit See also Air purifier Potential ozone hazards Devices generating high levels of ozone some of which use ionization are used to sanitize and deodorize uninhabited buildings rooms ductwork woodsheds boats and other vehicles Ozonated water is used to launder clothes and to sanitize food drinking water and surfaces in the home According to the U S Food and Drug Administration FDA it is amending the food additive regulations to provide for the safe use of ozone in gaseous and aqueous phases as an antimicrobial agent on food including meat and poultry Studies at California Polytechnic University demonstrated that 0 3 mmol mol levels of ozone dissolved in filtered tapwater can produce a reduction of more than 99 99 in such food borne microorganisms as salmonella E coli 0157 H7 and Campylobacter This quantity is 20 000 times the WHO recommended limits stated above 148 173 Ozone can be used to remove pesticide residues from fruits and vegetables 174 175 Ozone is used in homes and hot tubs to kill bacteria in the water and to reduce the amount of chlorine or bromine required by reactivating them to their free state Since ozone does not remain in the water long enough ozone by itself is ineffective at preventing cross contamination among bathers and must be used in conjunction with halogens Gaseous ozone created by ultraviolet light or by corona discharge is injected into the water 176 Ozone is also widely used in the treatment of water in aquariums and fishponds Its use can minimize bacterial growth control parasites eliminate transmission of some diseases and reduce or eliminate yellowing of the water Ozone must not come in contact with fishes gill structures Natural saltwater with life forms provides enough instantaneous demand that controlled amounts of ozone activate bromide ions to hypobromous acid and the ozone entirely decays in a few seconds to minutes If oxygen fed ozone is used the water will be higher in dissolved oxygen and fishes gill structures will atrophy making them dependent on oxygen enriched water Aquaculture edit Ozonation redirects here For the chemical reaction see ozonolysis Ozonation a process of infusing water with ozone can be used in aquaculture to facilitate organic breakdown Ozone is also added to recirculating systems to reduce nitrite levels 177 through conversion into nitrate If nitrite levels in the water are high nitrites will also accumulate in the blood and tissues of fish where it interferes with oxygen transport it causes oxidation of the heme group of haemoglobin from ferrous Fe2 to ferric Fe3 making haemoglobin unable to bind O2 178 Despite these apparent positive effects ozone use in recirculation systems has been linked to reducing the level of bioavailable iodine in salt water systems resulting in iodine deficiency symptoms such as goitre and decreased growth in Senegalese sole Solea senegalensis larvae 179 Ozonate seawater is used for surface disinfection of haddock and Atlantic halibut eggs against nodavirus Nodavirus is a lethal and vertically transmitted virus which causes severe mortality in fish Haddock eggs should not be treated with high ozone level as eggs so treated did not hatch and died after 3 4 days 180 Agriculture edit Ozone application on freshly cut pineapple and banana shows increase in flavonoids and total phenol contents when exposure is up to 20 minutes Decrease in ascorbic acid one form of vitamin C content is observed but the positive effect on total phenol content and flavonoids can overcome the negative effect 181 Tomatoes upon treatment with ozone show an increase in b carotene lutein and lycopene 182 However ozone application on strawberries in pre harvest period shows decrease in ascorbic acid content 183 Ozone facilitates the extraction of some heavy metals from soil using EDTA EDTA forms strong water soluble coordination compounds with some heavy metals Pb Zn thereby making it possible to dissolve them out from contaminated soil If contaminated soil is pre treated with ozone the extraction efficacy of Pb Am and Pu increases by 11 0 28 9 184 43 5 185 and 50 7 185 respectively Unintentional Environmental Effect on Pollinators edit Crop pollination is an essential part of an ecosystem Ozone can have detrimental effects on plant pollinator interactions 186 Pollinators carry pollen from one plant to another This is an essential cycle inside of an ecosystem Causing changes in certain atmospheric conditions around pollination sites or with xenobiotics could cause unknown changes to the natural cycles of pollinators and flowering plants In a study conducted in North Western Europe crop pollinators were negatively affected more when ozone levels were higher 187 Alternative medicine edit See also Ozone therapy The use of ozone for the treatment of medical conditions is not supported by high quality evidence and is generally considered alternative medicine 188 See also editCyclic ozone Global Ozone Monitoring by Occultation of Stars GOMOS Chappuis absorption International Day for the Preservation of the Ozone Layer September 16 Lightning Nitrogen oxides Ozone depletion including the phenomenon known as the ozone hole Ozone therapy Ozoneweb Ozonolysis Polymer degradation Sterilization microbiology References editFootnotes This vapor pressure is for the critical temperature which is below room temperature This includes Adams Arapahoe Boulder Broomfield Denver Douglas Jefferson and 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