There is also, as you pointed out, water vapour...1.27x1016 kg of the stuff which is generally excluded from the "dry mass" of the atmosphere.
If you want liquid oxygen, that temperature will need to be under 90.188K but over 54.36K. This will produce ~1.08x1018kg of liquid, which at a density of 1141 kg/m3 will produce a volume of 9.46x1014 cubic metres.
If you want pretty much everything else to freeze out, you'll need the temperature to be under the freezing point of nitrogen, 63.23K. This will produce ~4.02x1018kg of nitrogen ice. Its density is a little hard to pin down, but given wikipedia's formula of 0.0134T2 − 0.6981T + 1038.1 kg/m3 it is ~1047kg/m3 at 63K, just below its freezing point. That gives you ~3.84x1015 cubic metres of ice.
Note that nitrogen ice is less dense than liquid oxygen... you'll have no surface lakes or oceans of oxygen. You might get transient rains and rivers around sites of active volcanism or meteorite impacts so there may be some surface liquids, but they'll be rare. Once formed they'll persist until disturbed by a fresh eruption or impact, though. Earthquakes may also fracture the nitrogen ice allowing surface oxygen to drain away.
Argon freezes at 83.81K. Its density as a solid is around 1616 kg/m3, and so will produce ~2.96x1014m3 of ice.
CO2 will obviously be frozen. At a density of ~1700kg/m3 it will produce ~1.21x1012m^3.
The water vapour will freeze first of all, and with a density of 918.7kg/m3 it will have a volume of ~1.38x1013m3.
- The water vapour will freeze first, with a 4.6cm layer of ice.
- The CO2 will freeze out firstafter that, forming a ~0.4cm thick layer.
- The argon will form a ~9.9cm thick layer next.
- The oxygen will form a ~3.15m thick liquid layer.
- The nitrogen will form a ~12.8m thick ice layer on the top.
The total thickness of the condensed and frozen atmosphere will be ~16.051 m