i thought O22- was the one found in air
no, it isn't
the "common oxygen" found in air is the neutral O
2 molecule
(asides from this, only the very very rare ozone molecule O
3 is another oxygen species that might be airborn )
(...) but, if "oxygen" is an oxidizer, then this would imply that the stuff found in air is O2 and not O22- right?
though you're right that in fact O
2 is "the stuff in the air" , I don't agree with your line of reasoning: both oxygen and H
2O
2 (i.e. the stem molecule of O
22-) can be oxidisers, given the right circumstances
O
22- is the dianion of
hydrogenperoxide H
2O
2 , an interesting molecule with both oxidising and reducing properties, respectively - depending on the partners it meets , the situation, i.e. the chemical setup it is subjected to.
the oxidizing properties of O
22- could be shown in this equation:
O
22- + 2 e-
2 O
2-this type of process you'll often meet under acid conditions, and should be written (as a half-process) like this:
H
2O
2 + 2 H
+ + 2 e
- 2 H
2O
... and in fact acidified hydrogenperoxid is a very powerfull oxidizer in its on right then
(in fact you'll meet this combo in lab, where it is used mostly for fast cleanup, it's that powerfull in oxidizing)
O2 oxidizes other substances, but it dissociates to do so.
just as kind of an academical remark: there also is a bunch of processes where oxygen will attack / oxidize other substances
without dissociating (think of the formation of sodium peroxide from burning sodium in pure oxygen)
O2 has already two electrons on unfavourable orbitals just because O2- or O22- attract them; adding more electrons to O2 would bring nothing.
I am not sure that I understand what you mean for the first part (could you pls. expand on this?) , and with all due respect, I disagree on the second part: there's several processes known where adding one or two electron(s) to the still intact oxygen molecule will "bring a lot" for the overall situation, for example:
O
2 + e
- O
2-( as known from reacting potassium with pure oxygen : K + O
2 KO
2 )
O
2 + 2 e
- O
22-(as known from reaction of sodium or barium with pure oxygen: 2 Na or Ba + O
2 Na
2O
2 or BaO
2)
regards
Ingo