In water, two hydrogen are covalently bonded to one oxygen making it a compound not a mixture.
It is not a mixture but a compound of hydrogen and oxygen. We call this compound water.
It is a homogenous mixture
Pure water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen.
The compound is water - H2O; the molecule of hydrogen is H2.
Water is a compound formed by chemical combination of Hydrogen and Oxygen. Chemical properties are changed in water, therefore it is a compound. also, in water, hydrogen and oxygen are in a fixed proportion by weight i.e. 1:8. these are not the properties of a mixture.
No. Water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, not a mixture.
It is not a mixture but a compound of hydrogen and oxygen. We call this compound water.
It is a Compound
It is a homogenous mixture
No. That would be a mixture. If you were to burn that mixture you would get water as a product. Water is a compound.
Pure water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen.
Hydrogen and Oxygen, though it is a compound, not a mixture.
Yes. It's a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen.
The compound is water - H2O; the molecule of hydrogen is H2.
Water is a compound formed by chemical combination of Hydrogen and Oxygen. Chemical properties are changed in water, therefore it is a compound. also, in water, hydrogen and oxygen are in a fixed proportion by weight i.e. 1:8. these are not the properties of a mixture.
When hydrogen and oxygen are kindled in the right quantities, then we mostly don't call the product a mixture. Rather we call it a compound. The most usual compound of hydrogen and oxygen is water. Its not important that the compound should have the properties of its constituting elements. If we that water as an example, then we all know that water is a non supporter of combustion whereas hydrogen and oxygen are highly inflammable gases.
No. It is a compound made of the elements oxygen and hydrogen: H2O.