Copy, type, and use

Oxide Symbol O²⁻

Oxide Symbol records O²⁻ for chemistry lessons and the query “oxide symbol”.

Character
O²⁻
Unicode
U+004F U+00B2 U+207B

Oxide Symbol Copy and Paste

Select and copy O²⁻. Paste the complete sequence, then verify that U+004F U+00B2 U+207B remains intact in the destination.

Copy the oxide symbol One click copies the exact Unicode character.
  1. 1
    Copy

    Press the button to copy O²⁻.

  2. 2
    Place the cursor

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  3. 3
    Paste

    Use Ctrl+V, Command+V, or the mobile Paste command.

chemistry lessonsformula noteslaboratory recordsreference tablesscientific documents

What Is the Oxide Symbol?

Oxide Symbol records O²⁻ for chemistry lessons and the query “oxide symbol”. Oxide Symbol assigns O²⁻ to chemical notation. For Oxide Symbol, formulas, codes, styled letters, and fields that give O²⁻ another role remain separate.

chemistry lessons

formula notes

laboratory records

reference tables

scientific documents

Oxide Symbol Variants and Related Forms

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molecular formula

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positive ion notation

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How to Type the Oxide Symbol

Choose your device or app to insert the oxide symbol without copying it from another page.

Oxide Symbol on Windows

Copy O²⁻ from this page. Character Map may help with supported characters; verify the full sequence U+004F U+00B2 U+207B after pasting.

Oxide Symbol on Mac

Copy O²⁻ or use Character Viewer where available, then confirm that the full sequence U+004F U+00B2 U+207B is present.

Oxide Symbol on iPhone and iPad

Press and hold O²⁻, choose Copy, and verify the pasted sequence in the destination app.

Oxide Symbol on Android

Press and hold O²⁻, tap Copy, and confirm every component of U+004F U+00B2 U+207B after pasting.

Oxide Symbol on Chromebook

Copy O²⁻ from this page or use the character picker, then verify the result in the target field.

Oxide Symbol on Microsoft Word

Paste O²⁻ into Word and confirm that the selected font supports every code point in U+004F U+00B2 U+207B.

Oxide Symbol on Google Docs

Paste O²⁻ into Google Docs or use Insert → Special characters where available, then inspect the final rendering.

Oxide Symbol Unicode and HTML Codes

Use these values when you need the oxide symbol in HTML, CSS, source code, or a character reference.

Unicode U+004F U+00B2 U+207B
Unicode name LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O + SUPERSCRIPT TWO + SUPERSCRIPT MINUS
HTML decimal O ² ⁻
HTML hex O ² ⁻
CSS escape 4F B2 207B

How to Use and Format the Oxide Symbol

Format O²⁻ according to the page-specific role of Oxide Symbol. Oxide Symbol records O²⁻ for chemistry lessons and the query “oxide symbol”. The encoded sequence is U+004F U+00B2 U+207B; its Unicode names are LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O + SUPERSCRIPT TWO + SUPERSCRIPT MINUS. Preserve every component, including capitalization, spaces, superscripts, punctuation, variation selectors, or zero-width joiners. In chemistry lessons, introduce the form with a readable label. In formula notes, retain the convention used by the source. In laboratory records, verify that the chosen font supports the complete sequence.

Oxide Symbol assigns O²⁻ to chemical notation. For Oxide Symbol, formulas, codes, styled letters, and fields that give O²⁻ another role remain separate. For web publishing, use selectable UTF-8 where practical, test copy-and-paste behavior, and provide an accessible name when the surrounding text does not already state “Oxide Symbol.” Check the final output in the website, document, spreadsheet, equation editor, export format, and assistive-technology workflow rather than approving a merely similar-looking substitute such as H₂O or Na⁺.

  • In chemistry lessons, define O²⁻ as Oxide Symbol before relying on the character alone.

  • Preserve the complete sequence U+004F U+00B2 U+207B; do not remove spaces, component letters, superscripts, joiners, or variation selectors.

  • Apply this intent boundary in formula notes: Oxide Symbol assigns O²⁻ to chemical notation. For Oxide Symbol, formulas, codes, styled letters, and fields that give O²⁻ another role remain separate.

  • Compare O²⁻ with H₂O and Na⁺ before selecting a visually similar form.

  • Use literal UTF-8 or the numeric references O ² ⁻ and O ² ⁻ so the result remains searchable and selectable.

  • Provide the accessible text label “Oxide Symbol” whenever O²⁻ appears without explanatory wording.

  • Test oxide symbol in the final font, mobile layout, copied text, PDF export, and screen-reader output before publication.

Oxide Symbol Examples

  • Oxide Symbol: O²⁻
  • Chemistry Lessons — O²⁻
  • Formula Notes: Oxide Symbol O²⁻
  • O²⁻ oxide symbol reference
  • Laboratory Records [O²⁻]
  • Copy form: O²⁻
  • Code points: U+004F U+00B2 U+207B
  • HTML decimal: O ² ⁻
  • HTML hexadecimal: O ² ⁻
  • Accessible label: Oxide Symbol

Common Oxide Symbol Mistakes

  • Using H₂O where O²⁻ is required changes the reviewed intent for Oxide Symbol.
  • Dropping part of U+004F U+00B2 U+207B while copying oxide symbol.
  • Treating O²⁻ as interchangeable with Na⁺ without checking the destination convention.
  • Leaving O²⁻ unexplained in chemistry lessons when readers can assign another meaning.
  • Assuming every font, browser, or emoji renderer displays Oxide Symbol exactly like the preview.
  • Converting O²⁻ to an image even though searchable, selectable text is appropriate.
  • Ignoring this page boundary: Oxide Symbol assigns O²⁻ to chemical notation. For Oxide Symbol, formulas, codes, styled letters, and fields that give O²⁻ another role remain separate.
  • Using O²⁻ as the only accessible name of a control, formula, status, category, or technical label.

Oxide Symbol intent boundary

Oxide Symbol assigns O²⁻ to chemical notation. For Oxide Symbol, formulas, codes, styled letters, and fields that give O²⁻ another role remain separate.

More About the Oxide Symbol

Oxide ion notation is O²⁻. The capital letter O identifies oxygen, while the raised 2− states the ionic charge. The sequence is U+004F U+00B2 U+207B and should be copied as a unit. A correct line may read “oxide ion: O²⁻” or place O²⁻ in a reaction whose species are already named. The superscript is not an atom count. A baseline 2 after O would suggest a different construction, and O by itself names the element rather than the ion. Those formulas differ in composition as well as charge. When a plain-text system cannot display superscripts, O^2- can be used as an explicitly marked fallback. Check all three encoded characters after copying. Some fonts make superscript minus very small, so an accompanying phrase such as “oxide ion, charge two minus” improves readability. The notation should remain capital O followed by the raised charge, without inserted spaces. Modern HTML can store literal O²⁻ directly or use the numeric references for U+004F, U+00B2, and U+207B. This page is a compact ion-formula reference, not a general article about oxygen compounds. Recopy the sample “Copy form: O²⁻,” confirm the final text still contains U+004F U+00B2 U+207B, and check that the visible heading names Oxide. This final check protects Oxide Symbol from font substitution, accidental character loss, and intent drift.

Oxide Symbol FAQ

What is the copyable form for Oxide Symbol?

This page uses O²⁻, encoded as U+004F U+00B2 U+207B, for the reviewed chemical notation intent.

How do I copy O²⁻?

Copy the complete sequence O²⁻ and verify that every component in U+004F U+00B2 U+207B remains after pasting.

Which HTML form reproduces Oxide Symbol?

Use literal UTF-8 O²⁻, decimal references O ² ⁻, or hexadecimal references O ² ⁻.

Why can O²⁻ look different across devices?

Fonts, shaping engines, and emoji renderers can change appearance while the encoded sequence U+004F U+00B2 U+207B remains unchanged.

Can I replace O²⁻ with H₂O?

Only when the destination convention requires that alternative. Oxide Symbol assigns O²⁻ to chemical notation. For Oxide Symbol, formulas, codes, styled letters, and fields that give O²⁻ another role remain separate.