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Periodic Table/Compounds/Ozone

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© Melvin Olsson 2025–2026
Data: IAEA & PubChem

Ozone

O₃·47.998 g/mol·Inorganic·CID 24823
AtmosphericAllotrope

An allotrope of oxygen with three atoms forming a bent molecule with resonance structures. Stratospheric ozone absorbs UV-B radiation; ground-level ozone is a respiratory irritant and pollutant.

IUPAC: ozone

Also known as: Triatomic oxygen, 10028-15-6, Ozon, Ozone heavy work, ozono (+14 more)

2D structure of Ozone

Molecular Structure

Molecular Propertiesmass · H-bonds · stereo

Molecular Weight

47.998g/mol

Exact Mass

47.984744Da

Monoisotopic Mass

47.984744Da

XLogP

-1.7

Polar Surface Area

41.1Ų

Complexity

4

Formal Charge

0

H-Bond Donors

0

H-Bond Acceptors

2

Rotatable Bonds

0

Heavy Atoms

3

Stereo Centers

0

Bond Stereo

0

Drug-Likeness (Lipinski's Rule of Five)

✓ 48.0 g/mol
MW ≤ 500
✓ -1.7
LogP ≤ 5
✓ 0
H-bond donors ≤ 5
✓ 2
H-bond acceptors ≤ 10

Passes all rules — good oral bioavailability predicted

GHS Hazard Classification

Danger
Oxidizer
Oxidizer
Corrosive
Corrosive
Acute Toxic
Acute Toxic
Irritant
Irritant
Health Hazard
Health Hazard
Environmental Hazard
Environmental Hazard
Hazards
  • H270May cause or intensify fire; oxidizer
  • H314Causes severe skin burns and eye damage
  • H315Causes skin irritation
  • H318Causes serious eye damage
  • H319Causes serious eye irritation
  • H330Fatal if inhaled
  • H335May cause respiratory irritation
  • H341Suspected of causing genetic defects
  • H372Causes damage to organs through prolonged or repeated exposure
  • H373May causes damage to organs through prolonged or repeated exposure

Source: PubChem GHS Classification. Always consult the SDS for handling.

Chemical IdentifiersSMILES · InChI

InChI

InChI=1S/O3/c1-3-2

Constituent Elements

O
OxygenZ=8

External Resources

PubChem ↗Wikipedia ↗