Hydrogen remain hydrogen.
Fluroxene, cyclopropane, divinly ether, ethyl chloride, ethyl ether and ethylene are all flammable liquids used as anesthesia. If a one-word answer is necessary here, then ether might be the one to use.
According to Geoff Smith of Hampshire, England : " Hydrochloric acid is a gas - hydrogen chloride - dissolved in water. It does not crystalise, at all, ever. "What is the application you are working on?
water dissolves ALL ionic and ALL polar compound's;examples of each are;Polar compound's,ethanol, ammonia, Hydrogen Fluoride, sulphur dioxide, acetoneIonic compounds,sodium chloridepotassium chloridelithium chloriderubidium chloridecesium chloride
hydrogen is not a non polar at all
Peroxisomes hold enzymes that digest amino acids, fatty acids, and hydrogen peroxide, a toxic metabolic product. Enzymes convert hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen or use it in reactions that degrade alcohol and other toxins. Drink alcohol, and peroxisomes in liver and kidney cells usually degrade nearly half of it.
It forms hydrogen chloride
all sorts of things i never herd of
Chloride
Fluroxene, cyclopropane, divinly ether, ethyl chloride, ethyl ether and ethylene are all flammable liquids used as anesthesia. If a one-word answer is necessary here, then ether might be the one to use.
No, it`s not possible to get any ionic compound by reacting chlorine and hydrogen together, all you'll get is Hydrogen Chloride.
Lithium can never be formed from hydrogen chloride in a chemical reaction, because lithium, hydrogen, and chlorine are all distinct elements, none of which can be converted any others by chemical means.
Sodium chloride; the others are all elements.
All acids have similar chemical properties. 1) All acids generate hydrogen gas on reacting with metals. So, hydrogen seems to be common to all acids.
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) is a gas. In the lab concentrated water hydrogen chloride solution (about 37 %, 18 M) is fuming; when opened so very dangerous. Sometimes the water solution of HCl gas is called hydrochloric acid (but this is not valid in all the languages).
Ethyl alcohol, yes, because it's an anti septic. Hydrogen peroxide would probably be a better choice.
When an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide is electrolyzed, hydrogen is produced at the cathode because hydrogen can be produced at a lower voltage than can sodium, and the supply of hydrogen from the water of the solution is sufficient to consume all the current supplied. When molten sodium chloride is electrolyzed, however, sodium is produced at the cathode.
the intermolecular forces are hydrogen bonds