ozonizer$57101$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το ozonizer$57101$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι ozonizer$57101$ - ορισμός

CHEMICAL COMPOUND
Ozone generator; Oxygen 3; Ozone in water; Trioxygen; O₃; Ozonizer; Ozonator; Ozone Chemical; Ozoneator; Activated oxygen; Activated Oxygen; Ozonation; Smell of electricity; Electric smell; Electricity smell; Triatomic oxygen; Oxygen dioxide; OZONE; Ozonated; Ozone gas; Ozone poisoning; Ozone toxicity
  • publisher=NASA Earth Observatory}}</ref>
  • The distribution of atmospheric ozone in partial pressure as a function of altitude
  • General reaction equation of ozonolysis
  • Total ozone concentration in June 2000 as measured by the NASA EP-TOMS satellite instrument
  • Nimbus-7]] satellite
  • Resonance Lewis structures of the ozone molecule
  • Ozone cracking in [[natural rubber]] tubing
  • 450px
  • [[Christian Friedrich Schönbein]] (18 October 1799 – 29 August 1868)
  • alt=
  • A laboratory method for the preparation of ozone by using Siemen's Ozoniser.
  • Gulfton]], [[Houston]] indicating an ozone watch
  • A prototype ozonometer built by John Smyth in 1865
  • Ozone production demonstration, Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, 1926

Ozonizer         
·noun An apparatus or agent for the production or application of ozone.
Ozone         
An allotropic form of oxygen. It possesses much more energetic chemical properties than oxygen. It is supposed to contain three atoms of oxygen in its molecule, represented thus:     O
   /
  O---O It is produced by electric discharges and it is its peculiar odor which is noticed about an electric machine, and sometimes in a thunderstorm near the path of a lightning flash. In the electrolysis of water some ozone may be produced, thus diminishing the volume of the oxygen or of the mixed gases given off. This is a source of inaccuracy in a gas voltameter.
ozone         
¦ noun
1. an unstable, pungent, toxic form of oxygen with three atoms in its molecule, formed in electrical discharges or by ultraviolet light.
2. Brit. informal fresh invigorating air.
Derivatives
ozonic adjective
Origin
C19: from Ger. Ozon, from Gk ozein 'to smell'.

Βικιπαίδεια

Ozone

Ozone () (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 latter, with its highest concentration high in the ozone layer of the stratosphere, which absorbs most of the Sun's ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

Ozone's odour 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. 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.