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  2. Triplet oxygen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triplet_oxygen

    Conservation of spin quantum number would require a triplet transition state in a reaction of triplet oxygen with a closed shell (a molecule in a singlet state). The extra energy required is sufficient to prevent direct reaction at ambient temperatures with all but the most reactive substrates, e.g. white phosphorus. At higher temperatures or ...

  3. Photosensitizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosensitizer

    The excited, triplet state photosensitizer then reacts with a substrate molecule which is not molecular oxygen to both form a product and reform the photosensitizer. Type I photosensitized reactions result in the photosensitizer being quenched by a different chemical substrate than molecular oxygen.

  4. Schenck ene reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schenck_ene_reaction

    The Schenck ene reaction or the Schenk reaction is the reaction of singlet oxygen with alkenes to yield hydroperoxides. The hydroperoxides can be reduced to allylic alcohols or eliminate to form unsaturated carbonyl compounds. It is a type II photooxygenation reaction, and is discovered in 1944 by Günther Otto Schenck. [1]

  5. Allotropes of oxygen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allotropes_of_oxygen

    Singlet oxygen is the common name used for the two metastable states of molecular oxygen (O 2) with higher energy than the ground state triplet oxygen. Because of the differences in their electron shells, singlet oxygen has different chemical and physical properties than triplet oxygen, including absorbing and emitting light at different ...

  6. Photooxygenation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photooxygenation

    A photooxygenation is a light-induced oxidation reaction in which molecular oxygen is incorporated into the product(s). [1] [2] Initial research interest in photooxygenation reactions arose from Oscar Raab's observations in 1900 that the combination of light, oxygen and photosensitizers is highly toxic to cells. [3]

  7. Diradical - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diradical

    The triplet state has total spin quantum number S=1 and is paramagnetic. [5] Therefore, diradical species display a triplet state when the two electrons are unpaired and display the same spin. When the unpaired electrons with opposite spin are antiferromagnetically coupled, diradical species can display a singlet state (S=0) and be diamagnetic. [6]

  8. Singlet oxygen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singlet_oxygen

    Irradiation of oxygen gas in the presence of an organic dye as a sensitizer, such as rose bengal, methylene blue, or porphyrins—a photochemical method—results in its production. [19] [9] Large steady state concentrations of singlet oxygen are reported from the reaction of triplet excited state pyruvic acid with dissolved oxygen in water. [20]

  9. Molecular orbital diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_orbital_diagram

    As in diboron, these two unpaired electrons have the same spin in the ground state, which is a paramagnetic diradical triplet oxygen. The first excited state has both HOMO electrons paired in one orbital with opposite spins, and is known as singlet oxygen. MO diagram of dioxygen triplet ground state