It is known that ozone cannot oxidize water, but that it is to a slight extent oxidized when other oxidisable substances are present is not surprising, as other phenomena of a similar kind are known.
The paper begins with the statement that besides ordinary inactive oxygen and ozonethere is a third modification known as active or nascent oxygen.
The conclusion that must necessarily be drawn from the result is that if carbon monoxide is a test for active oxygen, then when ozone is decomposed by heat there is no nascent or active oxygen formed.
Secondly, Meissner had stated that by the electrification of oxygenozone and antozone were formed.
The ozone was produced by the silent electric discharge in a Wright’s tube connected with a Stoltz electrical machine.
Schönbein and Meissner held that the ozone having been destroyed by the potassium iodide the antozone passed on and oxidized the water to hydrogen dioxide.
From these results he concludes that active oxygen may be detected by its power of oxidizing carbon monoxide, and states that this fact enables us to decide whether in oxidations effected by ozone there occur free atoms of oxygen.
That oxygen and ozone contain different amounts of energy may be shown in a number of ways; for example, by the fact that the conversion of ozone into oxygen is attended by the liberation of heat.
When unmixed with other gases ozone is very explosive, changing back into oxygen with the liberation of heat.
Experiments show that in changing oxygen into ozone no other kind of matter is either added to the oxygen or withdrawn from it.
Air or oxygen containing a small amount of ozoneis now used in place of oxygen in certain manufacturing processes.
While oxygen contains two atoms in its molecules, a study of ozone has led to the conclusion that it has three.
It is possible that traces of ozone exist in the atmosphere, although its presence there has not been definitely proved, the tests formerly used for its detection having been shown to be unreliable.
It is possible, however, to separate the ozoneand thus obtain it in pure form.
This recalls the similar change from oxygen into ozone, which soon ceases because the ozone is in turn decomposed into oxygen.
The conversion of oxygen into ozone is also reversible and may be represented thus: oxygen <--> ozone.
Oxygen is more soluble in water than hydrogen, and a very little of it is also lost by being converted into ozone and other substances.
How grateful, the leafy coolness and bracing ozone of the forest; the dancing shadows of its deep glens, with their garnered treasures of mosses and ferns!
The stability of endothermic bodies like nitric oxide and ozone at low temperatures requires further investigation.
The liquid ozone seems to be more magnetic than liquid oxygen.
Derivation from, or close relation to, ozone and hydrogen peroxid is vaguely hinted at, without definite assertion.
Ozone is generated in the air by lightning, and it is detrimental to them.
After the passage of lightning through the air ozone is produced--the gas that is produced after a flash of electricity.
The air of the ship was instantaneously charged with a hazy, bluish glow, and the sharp, stinging odor of ozone filled the ship.
The pungent odor ofozone filtered into the control room.
The ozonewas sharp enough to make their eyes water and nostrils burn.
He was in a great laboratory that hummed faintly with the suggestion of terrific power, that smelled of ozone and seemed filled with gigantic apparatus.
Condensed form of oxygen, essence of air That's fresh, or electricitee, Ozone is the stuff shaken health to repair.
Solidified Ozone they talk about now, To be bought in small bricks like pressed tea.
For a room containing 1,000 cubic feet, two teaspoonfuls of the powder, placed in a dish and moistened with water occasionally, will develop the ozone and disinfect the surrounding air without producing cough.
That ozone is in greatest quantity in spring, less in summer, diminishes in autumn, and is least in winter.
That ozoneis found much more frequently in the country than in towns.
The most important and interesting series of facts, however, connected with ozone are those established by the researches of M.
Ozone may be prepared artificially as a disinfectant by cautiously mixing without friction or concussion equal parts of peroxide of manganese, permanganate of potash, and oxalic acid.
For the exposure of the ozone papers, an ozone cage is employed, as shown at Fig.
Schonbein also observed that the proportion of ozone was largely augmented after heavy falls of snow.
Oxygen in the form of ozone, O{3}, is rapidly destructive to bacteria, and this fact is applied practically in the purification of water supplies for certain cities where the ozone is generated by electricity obtained cheaply from water power.
Ozone in large quantities artificially produced may give rise to the symptoms of ordinary catarrh, but it is not a cause of influenza.
Ozone has been used as an anti-fermentative in inhalation during three or five minutes every hour or two, by Jochheim.
Oxygen is contracted by passing an electric spark through it, and ozone is perceived by the peculiar odor arising therefrom.
Life is there, and will continue there until the ozone is entirely exhausted.
Again, ozone can be kept in the solid state under the pressure of two atmospheres; reduce this pressure, and it will begin to evaporate.
This was the decomposing machine which Colchis and Cobb had devised and made for the concentrating of the ozone in the air.
You will perceive by the above that each of you requires nearly two grains of ozone per day, or about 700 grains per year.
The expenditure of force for the result obtained was enormous; but there was no other method for them to get the amount of ozone required, except with greater power and cost.
Turning to his friends, he answered their mute inquiries by stating that he took these precautions lest the remaining ozone in the case should, in escaping, overpower them.
I do not desire that you should receive the impression that the oxygen is not needed for the man, but that the ozone only is required for the continuance of life where there is no action.
Craft then quickly broke the seals of the ozone bottles, while Hathaway placed the perforated vessel containing the stronetic acid at Cobb's head.
The ozonemachine had performed its mission, and was a thing of the past.
He did come, and many evenings after, and it was from this old man that Cobb first learned the art of making ozone in quantities.
You can easily see how near correct I was in my calculations, for there are not over ten grains of ozone left on the floor of the box to-night.
The quantity of ozone produced is small, five per cent being the maximum, and the usual quantity is far less than that.
Ozone will cause the inert N of the air to unite with H, to form ammonia.
So much ozone is reduced in this way that the air of cities contains less of it than country air.
Ozone is a disinfectant, like other bleaching agents, and serves to clear the air of noxious gases and germs of infectious diseases.
Ozone is a powerful oxidizing agent, and will change S, P, and As into their ic acids.
In this way large amounts of oxygen and ozone are liberated, and these elements assist to a considerable extent in the oxidation and neutralization of waste materials and disease products.
Increase of Oxygen and Ozone The liberation of electromagnetic currents through cold-water applications has other very important effects upon the system besides that of stimulation.
It is the increase of oxygen and ozone in the air that purifies and sweetens the atmosphere after the storm.
In acute as well as in chronic disease, large amounts of oxygen and ozone are required to burn up the morbid materials and to purify the system.
To increase the amount of oxygen and ozone in the system and thereby to promote the oxidation and combustion of effete matter.
Usually there is more ozoneat the seaside than elsewhere, but the quantity present is very minute.
Ozone is a poisonous, irrespirable gas of great interest scientifically, but it is not of any medicinal value.
The latter has supposed it to be a compound of oxygen and hydrogen, from the fact, that, when the ozone completely freed from moisture was passed over ignited copper, water was produced.
At the meeting of the American Association, an instrument for determining the relative quantity of ozonein the air was presented by Professor Horsford.
Method of Determining the Amount of Ozone in the Atmosphere.
If much water flowed from the aspirator, and of course much air flowed over the asbestus before it became blue, the quantity of ozoneindicated would be small.
If but little water flowed (and this could be measured), the quantity of ozone indicated would be greater.
The quantities of ozone would be inversely as the volumes of air passing through the tube before blueness is produced.
Where it refuses the power of attraction to the latter, ozone can still work.
I have only to produce ozone out of these fugitive oils.
Electrical conditions were to be examined; the presence of ozone tested; the vibration of a magnet was again to be resorted to to determine how far the magnetism of the earth might be affected by height.
Villard smiled affably and agreed that theozone from salt water was almost the elixir of life.
At last came the evening when, without the least "fuss and feathers," Mary Johnson leaned back in Henry Updyke's big car and drank in the ozone of Westchester county.
The girl loved to look upon the waters of the bay, and during her convalescing days she sat for hours on the sands of the beach and breathed the ozone borne in upon the breezes from the great Atlantic.
The odor of ozone came to Mrs. Baker's nostrils, and the acid odors burned her lungs.
He was busy for some time with his levers, and the smell of ozone reached Mrs. Baker's nostrils as she stared with horrified eyes at the animals.
So Nate and this Harmon feller rowed over to the Bar--to Ozone Island, I mean--and the desolation and loneliness of it seemed to suit him to perfection.
You'll spend the rest of your days as gen'ral provider for the Ozoneprivate asylum.
So in another day the four of 'em was landed on Ozone Island and so was the freight-car load of crates and boxes.
On the other hand, the spectroscope has brought us evidence that far aloft in the atmosphere, many miles above the earth, ozone is quite abundant.
Whatever ozone is produced from oxygen at such levels by lightning discharges or other possible agencies probably enters promptly into chemical union with oxidizable substances and therefore has only a brief existence.
Systematic observations were made of the prevalence of ozone at different places throughout the world, generally by noting the change of color of test-papers exposed to the air.
These "ozonometric" observations are now a closed chapter in the history of meteorology, for it has been found that the reactions of so-called ozone papers are due chiefly or entirely to atmospheric substances other than ozone.
The high-level ozone is further interesting because of exercising a certain control over the temperature of the lower air.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ozone" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.