Oxygen is one of the basic chemical elements. In its most common form, 
oxygen is a colorless gas found in air. It is one of the life-sustaining 
elements
on Earth and is needed by all animals. Oxygen is also used in many 
industrial, commercial, medical, and scientific applications. It is used in 
blast furnaces
to make steel, and is an important component in the production of many 
synthetic chemicals, including ammonia, alcohols, and various plastics. 
Oxygen and
acetylene are combusted together to provide the very high temperatures 
needed for welding and metal cutting. When oxygen is cooled below -297° F 
(-183°
C), it becomes a pale blue liquid that is used as a rocket fuel.

Oxygen is one of the most abundant chemical elements on Earth. About 
one-half of the earth's crust is made up of chemical compounds containing 
oxygen, and
a fifth of our atmosphere is oxygen gas. The human body is about two-thirds 
oxygen. Although oxygen has been present since the beginning of scientific
investigation, it wasn't discovered and recognized as a separate element 
until 1774 when Joseph Priestley of England isolated it by heating mercuric 
oxide
in an inverted test tube with the focused rays of the sun. Priestley 
described his discovery to the French scientist Antoine Lavoisier, who 
experimented
further and determined that it was one of the two main components of air. 
Lavoisier named the new gas oxygen using the Greek words oxys, meaning sour 
or
acid, and genes, meaning producing or forming, because he believed it was an 
essential part of all acids.

In 1895, Karl Paul Gottfried von Linde of Germany and William Hampson of 
England independently developed a process for lowering the temperature of 
air until
it liquefied. By carefully distillation of the liquid air, the various 
component gases could be boiled off one at a time and captured. This process 
quickly
became the principal source of high quality oxygen, nitrogen, and argon.

In 1901, compressed oxygen gas was burned with acetylene gas in the first 
demonstration of oxy-acetylene welding. This technique became a common 
industrial
method of welding and cutting metals.

The first use of liquid rocket propellants came in 1923 when Robert Goddard 
of the United States developed a rocket engine using gasoline as the fuel 
and
liquid oxygen as the oxidizer. In 1926, he successfully flew a small 
liquid-fueled rocket a distance of 184 ft (56 m) at a speed of about 60 mph 
(97 kph).

After World War II, new technologies brought significant improvements to the 
air separation process used to produce oxygen. Production volumes and purity
levels increased while costs decreased. In 1991, over 470 billion cubic feet 
(13.4 billion cubic meters) of oxygen were produced in the United States,
making it the second-largest-volume industrial gas in use.

Worldwide the five largest oxygen-producing areas are Western Europe, Russia 
(formerly the USSR), the United States, Eastern Europe, and Japan.

Raw Materials

Oxygen can be produced from a number of materials, using several different 
methods. The most common natural method is photo-synthesis, in which plants 
use
sunlight convert carbon dioxide in the air into oxygen. This offsets the 
respiration process, in which animals convert oxygen in the air back into 
carbon
dioxide.

The most common commercial method for producing oxygen is the separation of 
air using either a cryogenic distillation process or a vacuum swing 
adsorption
process. Nitrogen and argon are also produced by separating them from air.

Oxygen can also be produced as the result of a chemical reaction in which 
oxygen is freed from a chemical compound and becomes a gas. This method is 
used
to generate limited quantities of oxygen for life support on submarines, 
aircraft, and spacecraft.

Hydrogen and oxygen can be generated by passing an electric current through 
water and collecting the two gases as they bubble off. Hydrogen forms at the
negative terminal and oxygen at the positive terminal. This method is called 
electrolysis and produces very pure hydrogen and oxygen. It uses a large 
amount
of electrical energy, however, and is not economical for large-volume 
production.

The Manufacturing
Process

Most commercial oxygen is produced using a variation of the cryogenic 
distillation process originally developed in 1895. This process produces 
oxygen that
is 99+% pure. More recently, the more energy-efficient vacuum swing 
adsorption process has been used for a limited number of applications that 
do not require
oxygen with more than 90-93% purity.

Here are the steps used to produce commercial-grade oxygen from air using 
the cryogenic distillation process.

Pretreating

Because this process utilizes an extremely cold cryogenic section to 
separate the air, all impurities that might solidify-such as water vapor, 
carbon dioxide,
and certain heavy hydrocarbons-must first be removed to prevent them from 
freezing and plugging the cryogenic piping.

A test tube said to contain the last breath of Thomas Edison and given to 
Henry Ford, and ardent fan, as a keepsake by Edison's son Charles. 
(From
the collections of Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village, Dearborn, 
Michigan.)
A test tube said to contain the last breath of Thomas Edison and given to 
Henry Ford, and ardent fan, as a keepsake by Edison's son Charles.
(From the collections of Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village, Dearborn, 
Michigan.)

This test tube is one of the most popular artifacts in Henry Ford Museum & 
Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan. It is said to contain the last 
breath
of Thomas Alva Edison, the great inventor. According to Edison's son 
Charles, a set of eight empty test tubes sat on the table next to Edison's 
deathbed
in 1931. Immediately after Edison expired, his physician, put several of the 
tubes up to Edison's lips to catch the carbon dioxide from his deflating 
lungs.
Then, the physician carefully sealed each tube with paraffin and gave the 
tubes to Charles Edison. Charles Edison knew that Henry Ford's idol was 
Thomas
Edison and presented Ford with one of the tubes as a keepsake. The museum 
acquired the tube after the death of both Henry and Clara Ford.

There is some discussion among visitors just how much carbon dioxide and how 
much oxygen currently is contained in the tube. Some ask if anyone evacuated
the tube of oxygen before putting the tube to Edison's mouth (very 
unlikely). If not, how much of Edison's breath could be in the tube? So, 
they say, it
contains both carbon dioxide and oxygen? Nonetheless, it is an 
unconventional tribute to a great man by those sorry to see his light 
extinguished.

Nancy EV Bryk
List of 2 items
. 1 The air is compressed to about 94 psi (650 kPa or 6.5 atm) in a 
multi-stage compressor. It then passes through a water-cooled aftercooler to 
condense
any water
Before processing, air is pretreated to remove impurities that will clog the 
cryogenic piping. Once pretreated, the air is submitted to fractional 
distillation.
In the fractional distillation process, the components are gradually 
separated in several stages. Because all distillation processes work on the 
principle
of boiling a liquid to separate one or more of the components, a cryogenic 
section is required to provide the very low temperatures needed to liquefy 
the
gas components. Once the liquid oxygen is separated, it is purified and 
stored.
Before processing, air is pretreated to remove impurities that will clog the 
cryogenic piping. Once pretreated, the air is submitted to fractional 
distillation.
In the fractional distillation process, the components are gradually 
separated in several stages. Because all distillation processes work on the 
principle
of boiling a liquid to separate one or more of the components, a cryogenic 
section is required to provide the very low temperatures needed to liquefy 
the
gas components. Once the liquid oxygen is separated, it is purified and 
stored.
vapor, and the condensed water is removed in a water separator.
. 2 The air passes through a molecular sieve adsorber. The adsorber contains 
zeolite and silica gel-type adsorbents, which trap the carbon dioxide, 
heavier
hydrocarbons, and any remaining traces of water vapor. Periodically the 
adsorber is flushed clean to remove the trapped impurities. This usually 
requires
two adsorbers operating in parallel, so that one can continue to process the 
air-flow while the other one is flushed.
list end

Separating

Air is separated into its major components-nitrogen, oxygen, and 
argon-through a distillation process known as fractional distillation. 
Sometimes this name
is shortened to fractionation, and the vertical structures used to perform 
this separation are called fractionating columns. In the fractional 
distillation
process, the components are gradually separated in several stages. At each 
stage the level of concentration, or fraction, of each component is 
increased
until the separation is complete.

Because all distillation processes work on the principle of boiling a liquid 
to separate one or more of the components, a cryogenic section is required
to provide the very low temperatures needed to liquefy the gas components.
List of 6 items
. 3 The pretreated air stream is split. A small portion of the air is 
diverted through a compressor, where its pressure is boosted. It is then 
cooled and
allowed to expand to nearly atmospheric pressure. This expansion rapidly 
cools the air, which is injected into the cryogenic section to provide the 
required
cold temperatures for operation.
. 4 The main stream of air passes through one side of a pair of plate fin 
heat exchangers operating in series, while very cold oxygen and nitrogen 
from
the cryogenic section pass through the other side. The incoming air stream 
is cooled, while the oxygen and nitrogen are warmed. In some operations, the
air may be cooled by passing it through an expansion valve instead of the 
second heat exchanger. In either case, the temperature of the air is lowered
to the point where the oxygen, which has the highest boiling point, starts 
to liquefy.
. 5 The air stream-now part liquid and part gas-enters the base of the 
high-pressure fractionating column. As the air works its way up the column, 
it loses
additional heat. The oxygen continues to liquefy, forming an oxygen-rich 
mixture in the bottom of the column, while most of the nitrogen and argon 
flow
to the top as a vapor.
. 6 The liquid oxygen mixture, called crude liquid oxygen, is drawn out of 
the bottom of the lower fractionating column and is cooled further in the 
subcooler.
Part of this stream is allowed to expand to nearly atmospheric pressure and 
is fed into the low-pressure fractionating column. As the crude liquid 
oxygen
works its way down the column, most of the remaining nitrogen and argon 
separate, leaving 99.5% pure oxygen at the bottom of the column.
. 7 Meanwhile, the nitrogen/argon vapor from the top of the high-pressure 
column is cooled further in the subcooler. The mixed vapor is allowed to 
expand
to nearly atmospheric pressure and is fed into the top of the low-pressure 
fractionating column. The nitrogen, which has the lowest boiling point, 
turns
to gas first and flows out the top of the column as 99.995% pure nitrogen.
. 8 The argon, which has a boiling point between the oxygen and the 
nitrogen, remains a vapor and begins to sink as the nitrogen boils off. As 
the argon
vapor reaches a point about two-thirds the way down the column, the argon 
concentration reaches its maximum of about 7-12% and is drawn off into a 
third
fractionating column, where it is further recirculated and refined. The 
final product is a stream of crude argon containing 93-96% argon, 2-5% 
oxygen,
and the balance nitrogen with traces of other gases.
list end

Purifying

The oxygen at the bottom of the low-pressure column is about 99.5% pure. 
Newer cryogenic distillation units are designed to recover more of the argon 
from
the low-pressure column, and this improves the oxygen purity to about 99.8%.
List of 1 items
. 9 If higher purity is needed, one or more additional fractionating columns 
may be added in conjunction with the low-pressure column to further refine
the oxygen product. In some cases, the oxygen may also be passed over a 
catalyst to oxidize any hydrocarbons. This process produces carbon dioxide 
and
water vapor, which are then captured and removed.
list end

Distributing

About 80-90% of the oxygen produced in the United States is distributed to 
the end users in gas pipelines from nearby air separation plants. In some 
parts
of the country, an extensive network of pipelines serves many end users over 
an area of hundred of miles (kilometers). The gas is compressed to about 500
psi (3.4 MPa or 34 atm) and flows through pipes that are 4-12 in (10-30 cm) 
in diameter. Most of the remaining oxygen is distributed in insulated tank
trailers or railroad tank cars as liquid oxygen.
List of 2 items
. 10 If the oxygen is to be liquefied, this process is usually done within 
the low-pressure fractionating column of the air separation plant. Nitrogen 
from
the top of the low-pressure column is compressed, cooled, and expanded to 
liquefy the nitrogen. This liquid nitrogen stream is then fed back into the 
low-pressure
column to provide the additional cooling required to liquefy the oxygen as 
it sinks to the bottom of the column.
. 11 Because liquid oxygen has a high boiling point, it boils off rapidly 
and is rarely shipped farther than 500 mi (800 km). It is transported in 
large,
insulated tanks. The tank body is constructed of two shells and the air is 
evacuated between the inner and outer shell to retard heat loss. The vacuum
space is filled with a semisolid insulating material to further halt heat 
flow from the outside.
list end

Quality Control

The Compressed Gas Association establishes grading standards for both 
gaseous oxygen and liquid oxygen based on the amount and type of impurities 
present.
Gas grades are called Type I and range from A, which is 99.0% pure, to F, 
which is 99.995% pure. Liquid grades are called Type II and also range from 
A
to F, although the types and amounts of allowable impurities in liquid 
grades are different than in gas grades. Type I Grade B and Grade C and Type 
II
Grade C are 99.5% pure and are the most commonly produced grades of oxygen. 
They are used in steel making and in the manufacture of synthetic chemicals.

The operation of cryogenic distillation airseparation units is monitored by 
automatic instruments and often uses computer controls. As a result, their 
output
is consistent in quality. Periodic sampling and analysis of the final 
product ensures that the standards of purity are being met.

The Future

In January 1998, the United States launched the Lunar Prospector satellite 
into orbit around the moon. Among its many tasks, this satellite will be 
scanning
the surface of the moon for indications of water. Scientists hope that if 
sufficient quantities of water are found, it could be used to produce 
hydrogen
and oxygen gases through electrolysis, using solar power to generate the 
electricity. The hydrogen could be used as a fuel, and the oxygen could be 
used
to provide life support for lunar colonies. Another plan involves extracting 
oxygen from chemical compounds in the lunar soil using a solar-powered 
furnace
for heat. 

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