alxm said:
Why did you think that? You're constantly surrounded with oxidizable substances that don't spontaneously combust. The obvious conclusion would be that just because something can react with oxygen, doesn't mean it does so at room temperature.
Because, essentially, when I think of things oxidizing in air, I think of them burning in oxygen. As you point out, not necessarily so.
However, I also usually think of solids and liquids not burning in the air at room temperature, because the constituent molecules are bound to each other, and because of the limited surface area.
Despite that, I do indeed hear of many solids and liquids oxidizing on contact with the air, albeit slowly. I'm thinking lead, aluminum, that sort of thing.
When I think about gases, I think of two molecules bumping into each other and being free to react if their thermal energies are high enough. I had not considered that at room temperature, average thermal energies wouldn't be high enough -- which is silly, gas from a lighter or stove doesn't spontaneously burst into flame.
And yet, I had this notion that such collisions would happen often enough that a combustible gas in a room would be consumed eventually. I was apparently wrong, and I'm please to be corrected.
Where did you read that? Hydroxyl ions (and ions of any kind) are extremely rare in the gas phase.
For instance,
http://www.answers.com/topic/atmospheric-chemistry" at the answers.com atmospheric chemistry topic. I saw that in several other places as well, but I've closed all my tabs from that search.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroxyl_radical" says, "hydroxyl radicals are produced..., in atmospheric chemistry, by the reaction of excited atomic oxygen with water."
That's an unbalanced reaction; where did the negative charges go? You have two electrons more on the left side of the equation.
Ah. I misread OH-, for the hydroxyl radical, as OH
-, the ion. Pardon. I understand now that hydroxyl is neutral. Is the equation otherwise correct?
The same reason any reaction won't occur below a certain temperature; the transition-state barrier is higher than the average thermal energy. In the specific case of molecular oxygen, it's because the reactions are often spin-forbidden and cannot occur without forming an energetic radical intermediate.
Oookay. I'm now taking that intermediate radical to be the hydroxyl radical, although not directly from O
2.
Neither do diamonds, yet they're still thermodynamically unstable at room temperature and pressure.
See my fond superstitions about solids v. gases above.
So I don't really know why you'd be surprised.
Because I didn't know any better, and was ignorantly guessing.
A lifetime of months is actually very short for a gas-phase reaction at these temperatures. If you keep a CO/air mixture in a closed container at room temperature, it will essentially last indefinitely. The reason why it reacts in the atmosphere is because it's getting bombarded with UV radiation from the sun.
Gotcha.
Essentially no reactions occur by having three molecules bump into each other simultaneously.
Okay. What exactly happens at the molecular level? I have a CO molecule and an OH radical, and they bump into each other at sufficient energies to combine, but the quantities are not balanced. What happens? Does the CO grab the O and leave the H floating about?
I really don't know, that's why I'm asking. Thanks for getting me up to speed so far.