The temperature dependence of the bimolecular rate constant for O2(3SIGMA(g)) quenching of a series of aromatic hydrocarbon triplet states, k(T)ox, has been determined in toluene. Highly curved Arrhenius plots were obtained, indicating a change in rate-determining step over the available temperature range. At low temperatures, k(T)ox of all hydrocarbons approached a common limiting slope that was consistent with 4/9k(d). At higher temperatures, low positive or negative activation energies were observed, indicating the involvement of exciplex intermediacy in the overall quenching process. In each case, the room temperature value of k(T)ox reflects the reversible formation of an exciplex where product formation is the rate-determining step. The temperature dependence of naphthalene k(T)ox was determined in an additional four solvents exhibiting a wide range of polarity. Again strong curvature was apparent in the Arrhenius plots, with k(T)ox consistently exceeding 1/9k(d) at low temperatures. In all solvents the preequilibrium preexponential factors were identical within experimental error; variations in room temperature rate constants solely reflect solvent-dependent preequilibrium activation energies. These results lead to direct predictions of the temperature dependence of energy-transfer efficiencies when interpreted on the basis of the well-known spin-statistically derived scheme.