. The unpaired electrons participate in
three-electron bonding, shown here using dashed lines. The common
allotrope of elemental oxygen on Earth, , is generally known as oxygen, but may be called
dioxygen,
diatomic oxygen,
molecular oxygen,
dioxidene, or
oxygen gas to distinguish it from the element itself and from the triatomic allotrope
ozone, . As a major component (about 21% by volume) of Earth's
atmosphere, elemental oxygen is most commonly encountered in the diatomic form.
Aerobic organisms use atmospheric dioxygen as the terminal oxidant in
cellular respiration in order to obtain
chemical energy. The
ground state of dioxygen is known as
triplet oxygen, {{chem2|^{3}[O2]}}, because it has two unpaired electrons. The first excited state,
singlet oxygen, {{chem2|^{1}[O2]}}, has no unpaired electrons and is
metastable. The
doublet state requires an odd number of electrons, and so cannot occur in dioxygen without gaining or losing electrons, such as in the
superoxide ion () or the
dioxygenyl ion (). The ground state of has a bond length of 121
pm and a bond energy of 498 kJ/mol. It is a colourless gas with a boiling point of . It can be condensed from air by cooling with
liquid nitrogen, which has a boiling point of .
Liquid oxygen is pale blue in colour, and is quite markedly
paramagnetic due to the unpaired electrons; liquid oxygen contained in a flask suspended by a string is attracted to a magnet.
Singlet oxygen Singlet oxygen is the common name used for the two
metastable states of molecular
oxygen () with higher energy than the ground state
triplet oxygen. Because of the differences in their electron shells, singlet oxygen has different chemical and physical properties than triplet oxygen, including absorbing and emitting light at different wavelengths. It can be generated in a photosensitized process by energy transfer from dye molecules such as
rose bengal,
methylene blue or
porphyrins, or by chemical processes such as spontaneous decomposition of
hydrogen trioxide in water or the reaction of
hydrogen peroxide with
hypochlorite. ==Ozone==