
The tetraoxygen molecule (O4), also called oxozone, is an allotrope of oxygen consisting of four oxygen atoms.
The tetraoxygen molecule (O4), also called oxozone, is an allotrope of oxygen consisting of four oxygen atoms.
== History == Tetraoxygen was first predicted in 1924 by Gilbert N. Lewis, who proposed it as an explanation for the failure of liquid oxygen to obey Curie's law. Though not entirely inaccurate, computer simulations indicate that although there are no stable O4 molecules in liquid oxygen, O2 molecules do tend to associate in pairs with antiparallel spins, forming transient O4 units. In 1999, researchers thought that solid oxygen in its ε-phase, also known as red oxygen, (at pressures above 10 GPa) was O4. However, in 2006, it was shown by X-ray crystallography that this stable phase is in fact octaoxygen (). Nevertheless, positively charged tetraoxygen has been detected as a short-lived chemical species in mass spectrometry experiments.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).