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  • Because O is not naturally accuring and only exists under extremely special conditions, so virtually all pure oxygen appears as molecular oxygen O2.

  • Me: mom can we get O?

    Mom: we have O at home.

    O At home: O2

  • In its natural gaseous state, oxygen is generally found in pairs, hence O2. I guess when you saw "pure oxygen", this meant gaseous oxygen without any other gas normally found in the atmosphere. So no nitrogen, or carbon dioxide, just oxygen. In the form of O2 of course!

  • O2 denotes two oxygen atoms binding together into one molecule.

    O1 or simply O can't really exist for long in nature, because it's not stable and will bind with almost anything it meets, including another O atom.

  • I prefer to call O2 something else: dioxygen

    It's what I learned in chemistry class (same applies to the other diatomic molecular gases).

  • I asked this question to my nurse in the hospital as a kid (I was a sick child and my grandfather entertained himself and I by teaching math and science...it didn't take). She said that O2 is pure "breathable" oxygen. I'm not sure if that's correct but it was something my eight year old brain could wrap itself around.

48 comments