RachelGreen
Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2015
- Messages
- 84
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2017
I read that O2 is more stable than O3, since to decompose oxygen its double bond has to be broken and that requires a lot of energy in comparison to the less energy taken to decompose the single (coordinate covalent bond) in the ozone. Therefore, O3 is less than O2.
But, what I don't understand is, shouldn't it take more energy to decompose the O3 molecule? Shouldn't O3 be more stable than O2, since it has a single coordinate covalent bond as well as a double bond in its structure?
Can anyone explain to me why O3 is less stable than O2? Or is it something the HSC syllabus dumbs it down for us
But, what I don't understand is, shouldn't it take more energy to decompose the O3 molecule? Shouldn't O3 be more stable than O2, since it has a single coordinate covalent bond as well as a double bond in its structure?
Can anyone explain to me why O3 is less stable than O2? Or is it something the HSC syllabus dumbs it down for us