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By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman The Oxygen Cycle

By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

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The Oxygen Cycle. By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman. What is Oxygen?. The element Oxygen comes from the Greek words that mean ‘acid former’ Air is about 21% Oxygen. Oxygen is colorless, odorless, and tasteless. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

The Oxygen Cycle

Page 2: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

What is Oxygen?

• The element Oxygen comes from the Greek words that mean ‘acid former’

• Air is about 21% Oxygen.

• Oxygen is colorless, odorless, and tasteless.

• The element is blue in its liquid and solid forms.

Page 3: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

History of Oxygen

• Oxygen was discovered independently by the Swedish chemist Carl Scheele and English chemist Joseph Priestley in the period 1773-1774

• Given name by French chemist Antoine Laurent Lavoisier in 1779

Page 4: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Meaning of Oxygen

• Originates from Greek words

• Gennan meaning ‘generate’

• Oxus meaning ‘acid’

• It was believed that all acids contained oxygen

Page 5: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Structural Forms of Oxygen

• Ordinary Oxygen: Contains two atoms per molecule, formula O2.

• Ozone: Contains three atoms per molecule, formula O3.

• Nonmagnetic: Is pale blue and contains four atoms per molecule, formula O4.

Page 6: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Properties of Oxygen

• Non-metallic element

• Colorless, odorless, tasteless as a gas

• Liquid/solid forms are pale blue

• Poor conductor of heat and electricity

• Melting point is -218.4°C

• Boiling point is -183°C

Page 7: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Common Uses of Oxygen

• Oxidizer

• Rocket propulsion

• Medicine

• Oxygen sensors• Welding

Page 8: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

How Much Oxygen is There?

• most abundant element on earth

• Oxygen makes up fifth of the atmosphere

• Oxygen makes up 46.6% of the earth’s crust

• oxygen content of seawater is 85.7%

Page 9: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Oxygen In Water

• Oxygen in water is known as a dissolved oxygen or DO.

• In nature, oxygen enters water when water runs over rocks and creates surface area.

• Microorganisms in bodies of water begin to metabolize organic matter, consuming oxygen in the process.

Page 10: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis is the process by which plants, some bacteria, and some protistans use the energy from sunlight to produce glucose which cellular respiration converts into ATP, the energy used by all living things.

6H2O + 6CO2 ----------> C6H12O6+ 6O2

Page 11: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Photosynthesis Cont…

• The conversion of unusable sunlight energy into usable chemical energy, is associated with the actions of the green pigment chlorophyll.

Page 12: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Pictures of Photosynthesis

Page 13: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Why do animals need oxygen?

Animals need oxygen to survive. In fact, all organisms need oxygen to complete the process to burning glucose for fuel. Burning glucose is an essential source for energy in our bodies. The body can use glucose, fat, or carbohydrates, but glucose gives the most energy.

Page 14: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Respiration

• Cellular respiration is the set of the metabolic reactions and processes that take place in organisms' cells to convert biochemical energy from nutrients into ATP, and then release waste products.

Page 15: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Respiration Continued

• The oxygen is used to break down certain organic compounds, which yield H2O and CO2, which are returned to the environment

Page 16: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Plant Respiration

• Plant cells also go through respiration

• The plant cells use oxygen to breakdown glucose to release energy, with the byproduct being CO2

• Without oxygen the plant cells would suffocate and die.

Page 17: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Respiration Picture

Page 18: By Christi Choi, Matt Brenner, Paul Lee, and Rachel Baughman

Workcited

• http://periodic.lanl.gov/elements/8.html• http://www.lenntech.com/periodic-chart-

elements/o-en.htm• http://science.jrank.org/pages/4970/Oxygen.html• http://www.lenntech.com/elements-and-water/

oxygen-and-water.htm• http://www.facts-about.org.uk/science-element-

oxygen.htm• http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/

BIOBK/BioBookPS