Reactivity of Molecular Oxygen

A special issue of Oxygen (ISSN 2673-9801).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2021) | Viewed by 385

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
California Institute of Technology, Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Pasadena, CA, USA
Interests: biophysical chemistry; bioinorganic chemistry; molecular catalysis; methane oxidation; greenhouse gases and climate change; bioenergetics; membrane proteins

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Molecular oxygen is one of the strongest oxidants in chemistry. However, it is relatively inert compared with other oxidants like F2 and Cl2. The reactivity of O2 is tempered by the fact that the molecule is an electronic triplet in its ground state, but most molecules exist in the singlet electronic state. To bolster its reactivity, O2 must be activated first by an association with a metal surface via chemi- or physio-adsorption, by binding to transition metal ions, or by transformation into its electronic singlet excited state. The activation of O2 is fundamental to many chemical processes, including the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), the fuel cell, catalytic conversion of alkanes into their oxygenates, and C–H activation and functionalization of organic molecules in chemical syntheses. As expected, the outcome of the reactivity is strongly dependent on the details of the activation. Understanding these details remains challenging, but the chemistry is rich and far-reaching and intellectual opportunities abound.

This Special Issue is mainly focused on “Reactivity of Molecular Oxygen”. Submissions are welcome but not limited to the topics listed below. Types of contributions welcome in this Special Issue are full research articles, short communications, and reviews.

Prof. Sunney I. Chan
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • Physio- and chemi-adsorption of O2 on metal surfaces;
  • Activation of O2 by transition metals;
  • Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR);
  • Fuel cell technology;
  • C–H activation and functionalization;
  • Catalytic conversion of hydrocarbons into oxygenates;
  • Molecular singlet O2.

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Published Papers

There is no accepted submissions to this special issue at this moment.
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