No. If anything, a combustion reaction will consume hydrogen.
It is much easier to control the hydrogen and oxygen during direct combustion than during their reaction in a fuel cell.
No, a combustion reaction is where a chemical reacts with oxygen to produce an oxide and lots of heat. Glow sticks use a a kind of reaction chemiluminescence. The reactions often involve oxygen particularly hydrogen peroxide, but they are not combustion reactions and typically produce little to no heat
Hydrogen is an element, not a reaction. However, it is very combustible.
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
This is an oxidation reaction (combustion, burning).
Because burning (combustion) is an oxidation reaction and hydrogen is not implied.
combustion and combination
It is much easier to control the hydrogen and oxygen during direct combustion than during their reaction in a fuel cell.
No, a combustion reaction is where a chemical reacts with oxygen to produce an oxide and lots of heat. Glow sticks use a a kind of reaction chemiluminescence. The reactions often involve oxygen particularly hydrogen peroxide, but they are not combustion reactions and typically produce little to no heat
Hydrogen is an element, not a reaction. However, it is very combustible.
Not a combustion reaction. Combustion reactions produce CO2 and H2O.
A complete combustion reaction will produce CO2 and H2O, while an incomplete combustion reaction produces CO and H2O.
yes
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
a combustion reaction a combustion reaction
This is an oxidation reaction (combustion, burning).
2H2 + O2 -> 2H2O - reaction to produce water H2+O2-> H2O2 - reaction to produce hydrogen peroxide