Or O+O=O2
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On Thu, Apr 9, 2020 at 5:01 PM Anthony Cesaroni <anthony@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
So to clarify, O+O2 to O3? That makes more sense.
Anthony J. Cesaroni
President/CEO
Cesaroni Technology/Cesaroni Aerospace
http://www.cesaronitech.com/
(941) 360-3100 x101 Sarasota
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*From:* arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> *On
Behalf Of *Wyatt Rehder
*Sent:* Thursday, April 9, 2020 7:51 PM
*To:* arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
*Subject:* [AR] Re: Question for the h2o2 experienced...
I think most of the job monoatomic oxygen has in disinfection is the
formation of ozone. As if a monoatomic oxygen reacts with normal O2 it
makes ozone most of the time. Which then ozone sticks around enough to do
the disinfecting.
On Thu, Apr 9, 2020 at 2:43 PM roxanna Mason <rocketmaster.ken@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
The "O" or monatomic oxygen doesn't stay that way for very
long,and reverts to the diatomic in maybe nano seconds,
so is that even long enough to kill the intended target.
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On Wed, Apr 8, 2020 at 1:50 PM Uwe Klein <uwe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Am 08.04.2020 um 20:04 schrieb roxanna Mason:
No it does not nor can not accumulate, peroxide decomposes into waterActually single O "statu nascendi" at the beginning.
and O2 gas. Watch it, those bubbles are oxygen gas.
highly reactive and why it works as a disinfectant
or cleaning agent.
Uwe