The 'ozone-oxygen cycle' is the process by which
ozone is continually regenerated in
Earth's
stratosphere, all the while converting
ultraviolet radiation into
heat energy. In
1930 Sidney Chapman resolved the
chemistry involved.
How the ozone layer works
The ozone molecules formed by the above reaction absorb ultraviolet radiation having wavelengths between 240 and 310 nm. The triatomic ozone molecule becomes diatomic molecular oxygen plus a free oxygen atom:
O
3 + (radiation < 310 nm) → O
2 + O
The atomic oxygen produced immediately reacts with other oxygen molecules to reform ozone:
O
2 + O + M → O
3 + M
where "M" once again denotes the third body that carries off the excess energy of the reaction. In this way,
the chemical energy released when O and O
2 combine is converted into kinetic energy of molecular motion. The overall effect is to convert penetrating UV light into heat, without any net loss of ozone. This cycle keeps the ozone layer in a stable balance while protecting the lower atmosphere from UV radiation, which is harmful to most living beings. It is also one of two major sources of heat in the stratosphere (the other being the kinetic energy released when O
2 is photolyzed into O atoms).
Removal
If an oxygen atom and an ozone molecule meet, they recombine to form two oxygen molecules:
O
3 + O → 2 O
2
The overall amount of ozone in the stratosphere is determined by a balance between
production by solar radiation, and removal by recombination. The removal rate is slow, since the concentration of O atoms is very low.
Certain
free radicals, the most important being
hydroxyl (OH),
nitric oxide (NO), and atoms of
chlorine (Cl) and
bromine (Br),
catalyze the recombination
reaction, leading to an ozone layer that is thinner than it would be if the catalysts were not present.
Most of the OH and NO are naturally present in the stratosphere, but human activity, especially emissions of chlorofluorocarbons (
CFCs) and
halons, has greatly increased the Cl and Br concentrations, leading to
ozone depletion. Each Cl or Br atom can catalyze tens of thousands of decomposition reactions before it is removed from the stratosphere.
External links
★
Stratospheric Ozone: An Electronic Textbook